Govt Downgrades Security to Z-Plus Category

AGENCIES / New Delhi
The union government has withdrawn the Special Protection Group (SPG) from former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s security cover.
A statement from the ministry of home affairs said that Singh will now have Z-plus security instead of SPG, “The current security cover review is a periodical and professional exercise based on threat perception that is purely based on professional assessment by security agencies. Dr. Manmohan Singh continues to have a Z+ security cover,” it said.
Congress leaders termed the development unfortunate.
Sources from Manmohan Singh’s office pointed out that UPA had also reviewed former Prime Minister and senior BJP leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s security under the amended rules but continued with his SPG cover till his death last year. Singh’s office also said that unlike Vajpayee, who was bedridden after demitting office, Singh actively moves around and therefore is more exposed to security threats.
The SPG was set up in 1985 after the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, and Parliament passed the SPG Act in 1988 dedicating the group to protecting the Prime Minister of India. In 1989, VP Singh government had withdrawn the SPG protection given to the outgoing PM Rajiv Gandhi.
After Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated in 1991, the SPG Act was amended, offering SPG protection to all former Prime Ministers and their families for a period of at least 10 years. The rule was amended again in 2002 to make provision for an annual review. Former prime ministers such as HD Deve Gowda also lost their SPG cover after a review.