Guide

Organisation Index

A categorised list of the bodies the CAPF wiki covers: the five CAPFs and wider force family, national constitutional and statutory bodies, and international organisations, with founding facts and the security framing

CAPF wiki7 min read8 sections

This page is a categorised list of the organisations the CAPF (Assistant Commandants) wiki covers: the five Central Armed Police Forces and the wider force family, the national constitutional and statutory bodies, and the international organisations. The facts derive from the owner notes (exam-info/the-five-forces, the polity notes on constitutional and statutory bodies and human rights and internal security, and paper-1/current-events/international-organisations-and-india), are distilled into concept cards, and are held as machine-readable rows in _dict/forces.yaml and _dict/organisations.yaml. This index is navigation and quick recall; the authoritative catalogue is master index.

Currency caution, per sources and honesty policy: sanctioned force strengths, current Director-Generals, rotating chairs and summit hosts are year-sensitive. Verify the latest against the Ministry of Home Affairs Annual Report and the primary sources rather than committing a number or a name. Distinguish raised (the year a force began) from the founding act (the governing statute, often later).

The five CAPFs (recruited via the CAPF AC exam, all under the MHA)

These five are the forces the UPSC CAPF (AC) examination recruits Assistant Commandants (Group A) into. All five are under the Ministry of Home Affairs.

Force Raised Founding Act Border or role HQ
Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) 1939 (renamed CRPF 1949) CRPF Act, 1949 Internal security, counter-insurgency, anti-Naxal, riot control, election duty; the largest CAPF New Delhi
Border Security Force (BSF) 1965 BSF Act, 1968 India-Pakistan and India-Bangladesh land borders in peacetime New Delhi
Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) 1962 ITBP Act, 1992 India-China Himalayan border; high-altitude posts New Delhi
Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) 1963 (reconstituted 2003) Reconstituted by the MHA, 2003 Open India-Nepal and India-Bhutan borders; lead intelligence agency for them New Delhi
Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) 1969 CISF Act, 1968 Security of industrial, airport, metro, port and nuclear-space installations New Delhi

Recall hooks: raising years CRPF 1939, ITBP 1962, SSB 1963, BSF 1965, CISF 1969. Border-to-force: BSF (Pakistan and Bangladesh), ITBP (China), SSB (Nepal and Bhutan). The CISF is the force least associated with the border and the only CAPF that guards private-sector undertakings (on cost reimbursement). CRPF specialist units include the Rapid Action Force (RAF, 1992) and CoBRA (from 2008). Owner note: the five forces; deep note: the five capfs in depth.

The wider force family (not recruited via the CAPF AC exam)

Force Raised Ministry / control Role
Assam Rifles (AR) 1835 (oldest paramilitary force in India) Dual: administrative under the MHA, operational under the Army (Defence) India-Myanmar border; north-east counter-insurgency
National Security Guard (NSG) 1984 (operational 1986) MHA Counter-terrorism, counter-hijack, hostage rescue; the "Black Cats"
National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) 2006 MHA, under the NDMA Specialist disaster response; battalions seconded from the five CAPFs
Indian Coast Guard (ICG) 1978 Ministry of Defence (not the MHA) Maritime zones, the EEZ, coastal security, anti-smuggling, search and rescue
Railway Protection Force (RPF) (statutory force) Ministry of Railways (not the MHA) Security of railway property, passengers and passenger areas

Recall hooks: the Assam Rifles dual-control structure is a common exam point; the NDRF is the operational arm of the NDMA under the Disaster Management Act, 2005; the Indian Coast Guard and the RPF are the two armed forces of the Union most often mistaken for MHA forces but are not (Defence and Railways respectively). Concept cards: concept assam rifles, concept national security guard, concept ndma and ndrf, concept indian coast guard, concept railway protection force.

The human-rights framing (the CAPF lens)

Every force operates under the Constitution (Article 21), the NHRC mechanism (recommendatory powers, with the Section 19 limit on complaints against the armed forces under the Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993), and the principles of necessity, proportionality and minimum force. Article 33 lets Parliament curtail the forces' own Fundamental Rights in the interest of discipline. This framing is the dimension CAPF tests; owner note human rights and internal security and deep note afspa and the human rights debate.

National constitutional and statutory bodies

Body Status Founding / Article Role in one line
Election Commission of India (ECI) Constitutional (Art 324) 1950 Conducts elections to Parliament, State legislatures, President and Vice-President
Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) Constitutional (Art 148) Office 1858 Audits Union and State accounts; guardian of the public purse
Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) Constitutional (Art 315) 1926 (as PSC) Recruits to the All-India and central services, including the CAPF (AC) exam
Finance Commission Constitutional (Art 280) 1951 (first) Recommends Centre-State tax devolution every five years
GST Council Constitutional (Art 279A) 2016 Chaired by the Union Finance Minister with State representatives
National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) Statutory 1993 Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993; chaired by a former CJI or Supreme Court judge; recommendatory
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Statutory (central bank) 1935 Monetary policy, currency issue, banking regulation; CPI inflation target 4 percent (band 2 to 6)
NITI Aayog Executive (think tank) 2015 Replaced the Planning Commission (1950 to 2014); a policy think tank, not fund-allocating
National Investigation Agency (NIA) Statutory central agency 2008 NIA Act, 2008 after the 2008 Mumbai attacks; investigates scheduled terror and security offences

Owner notes: constitutional and statutory bodies, money and banking and the rbi, planning and niti aayog.

International organisations

UN system and Bretton Woods (HQ matching is the common framing)

Body Type HQ Founded India
United Nations (UN) Intergovernmental New York 1945 Founding member; UN Day 24 October
UN Security Council (UNSC) UN principal organ New York 1945 Recurring non-permanent member; seeks permanent reform
International Court of Justice (ICJ) UN judicial organ The Hague 1945 15 judges; principal judicial organ
WHO UN specialised agency Geneva 1948 Member
ILO UN specialised agency Geneva 1919 Founding member
UNESCO UN specialised agency Paris 1945 Member; World Heritage Sites
FAO UN specialised agency Rome 1945 Member
WFP UN body Rome 1961 Member
IAEA UN-affiliated Vienna 1957 Member; nuclear safeguards
UNICEF UN body New York 1946 Member
UNDP UN body New York 1965 Publishes the Human Development Index
WTO Trade body Geneva 1995 Founding member; succeeded GATT (1947)
IMF Bretton Woods Washington, D.C. 1944 Founding member; World Economic Outlook
World Bank Group Bretton Woods Washington, D.C. 1944 Founding member; arms IBRD, IDA, IFC, MIGA, ICSID

Regional and plurilateral groupings (the CAPF security layer)

Body Type HQ Founded India
SAARC South Asia Kathmandu 1985 Founding member; 8 members; largely stalled
ASEAN Southeast Asia Jakarta 1967 Dialogue partner, not a member; anchor of Act East
BIMSTEC Bay of Bengal Dhaka 1997 Member; connectivity and security
SCO Eurasian security bloc Beijing 2001 Full member since 2017; counter-terror via RATS
BRICS Emerging economies No fixed secretariat 2006 (first summit 2009) Founding member; runs the New Development Bank
G20 Economic forum No permanent secretariat 1999 (summits from 2008) Member; hosted the G20 summit in 2023
QUAD Indo-Pacific security No secretariat Revived 2017 Member with the US, Japan, Australia; maritime security
G7 Advanced economies No permanent secretariat 1975 Not a member; invited as a guest
ICRC Humanitarian body Geneva 1863 Custodian of the Geneva Conventions (1949)

Recall hooks: India is NOT a full member of ASEAN (a dialogue partner) or the G7 (a guest). The groupings most likely to carry a CAPF security framing are the SCO (the RATS counter-terror body), the QUAD (Indo-Pacific maritime security) and BIMSTEC. The ICRC is the custodian of the Geneva Conventions, the core of international humanitarian law, which links to the human-rights syllabus. Owner note: international organisations and india.

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