Amarnath Yatra: Barcode slips for pilgrims; about 40\,000 troops to guard route

Amarnath Yatra: Barcode slips for pilgrims; about 40,000 troops to guard route

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Security arrangements for the forthcoming annual in have been scaled up, with authorities deciding to issue a 'barcode'-enabled authority slip to pilgrims to keep a track of the actual number of people travelling to and from the cave shrine.

The Centre has decided to deploy about 40,000 central paramilitary and state police personnel to secure the 46-day that begins on July 1 from the twin route -- traditional Pahalgam track in district and shortest Baltal track in district.

It will conclude on August 15, the day will be celebrated in the country.

Out of total number of forces, about 32,000 are specifically meant to guard the pilgrimage to the 3,880 metre high cave shrine of in south Himalayas.

"We will be doing a pilot project this time and pilgrims will be issued barcoded yatra slips. This will help us in ascertaining the exact number of pilgrims who are on the move and will also help in the ensuring an overall better security setup," CRPF Director General (DG) R R told here.

The DG said the shrine board authorities and security agencies have prepared a "detailed plan" to ensure that all pilgrims who register for the yatra are given the barcoded authority slips that will contain their vital details, photographs and contact numbers.

All security challenges will be taken care of and any input or concern vis-a-vis security will be worked upon by all the stakeholders in the and the Centre, said.

A senior based in said the yatra slips will be triplicate, one each for the shrine board, pilgrim and for handing over to the checking staff on route.

There will be access control checking gadgets that will be deployed both at the Pahalgam and Baltal routes, he said. The barcode will capture all the information of a pilgrim and it can be accessed by a click of the mouse, the said.

The CRPF has also procured upgraded RFID tags and will use to mark the civilian vehicles plying on the yatra route. This was used for the first time during the yatra last year and thousands of these were put on the vehicles.

Keeping in the mind the security challenges that emerged after the February 14 Pulwama terror attack, the CRPF has also deployed an enhanced number of its counter-IED teams that will sweep roads and vehicles against such threats.

A suicide bomber had used a heavy volume of improvised (IED) to trigger a blast on the that killed 40 CRPF men near Pulwama.

The force will deploy road opening parties to secure the transit roads in coordination with the Army, and Kashmir Police and other central forces like the and the Indo-Tibetan Border Police force, the Kashmir-based said.

While 300 companies of central forces have been asked to stay put in after the Lok Sabha elections, about 16 are being sent in now, the official said.

If need arises, more forces would be sent in before the yatra commences, he said.

In 2017, militants attacked a pilgrim bus that left eight pilgrims dead and several injured. Last year the yatra went off peacefully.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, May 29 2019. 19:25 IST