Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
India

Modi's wife, mother to get Special Protection Group security cover

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 22 May, 2014 01:25 PM
    Prime Minister-designate Narendra Modi’s wife and mother will also get the Special Protection Group (SPG) security soon after he takes oath as India's 14th prime minister on May 26, security officials said.
     
    “Modi's mother Hiraben and wife Jashodaben will also be provided SPG security. But his three brothers and two sisters will be get Z-category security, provided by the state police,” an official, who did not wish to be named, told IANS.
     
    Modi’s wife and mother as well as his brothers and sisters live in Gujarat. Modi and his wife live separately.
     
    Sources said SPG commandos have already been sent to Gujarat to assess security requirements for guarding his mother and wife. 
     
    The state police have also been directed to assess the security of his brothers and sisters and then accordingly provide them security, officials said. 
     
    His elder brother, Soma, is a retired health department official, who now runs an old age home in Ahmedabad. Modi is next in the line. The third one, Prahlad, owns a shop in Ahmedabad, while the fourth one Pankaj is a clerk in the Information Department of Gujarat government in Gandhinagar.
     
     
    Modi's mother stays with Soma, while his wife, a retired school teacher, lives in Rajosana village in Banaskantha district in Palanpur. 
     
    According to the SPG Act, India’s prime minister and members of his immediate family are provided security cover by the elite commando group who are specially trained in VIP security. 
     
    Another SPG official said that Modi faces major threat to his life and around 1,000 Black Cat commandos will be deployed at Modi's official residence at 7, Race Course, his office in South Block after he takes oath May 26. 
     
    Currently, SPG cover is being given to outgoing prime minister Manmohan Singh, Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi, his sister Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Election Special: Can Modi strike a bargain of decency on Varanasi?

    Election Special: Can Modi strike a bargain of decency on Varanasi?
    Ofcourse there will be some sophistry by which the current scramble for Varanasi will be justified, but there are finer reasons for which the city should be more frequently remembered.

    Election Special: Can Modi strike a bargain of decency on Varanasi?

    Upset Jaswant Singh may dump BJP and fight as independent from Barmer

    Upset Jaswant Singh may dump BJP and fight as independent from Barmer
    Annoyed at not being considered from Rajasthan's Barmer seat, senior BJP leader Jaswant Singh is likely to contest the Lok Sabha elections as an independent candidate from the constituency, sources close to him said Saturday.

    Upset Jaswant Singh may dump BJP and fight as independent from Barmer

    A Tribute: Bhagat Singh was a humanist and innately secular

    A Tribute: Bhagat Singh was a humanist and innately secular
    Unfortunately, Bhagat Singh has been grossly commercialised or romanticized. A man who always placed reason far above emotion has been made to be the 'angry young man' of our freedom struggle.

    A Tribute: Bhagat Singh was a humanist and innately secular

    Congress fields Amarinder from Amritsar

    Congress fields Amarinder from Amritsar
    Congress Friday fielded former Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh from Amritsar to take on senior BJP leader Arun Jaitley in the forthcoming Lok Sabha elections.

    Congress fields Amarinder from Amritsar

    AAP expels two leaders for fraud

    AAP expels two leaders for fraud
    Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) Friday expelled two leaders as they allegedly tried to provide party tickets for monetary consideration.

    AAP expels two leaders for fraud

    1984 Anti-Sikh Riots: US court asks Sonia Gandhi to show passport

    1984 Anti-Sikh Riots: US court asks Sonia Gandhi to show passport
    Gandhi had filed a motion in a federal court in Brooklyn, New York, seeking dismissal of a human rights violation case against her relating to the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, asserting she had not been served the summons as she was not in the US during that time.

    1984 Anti-Sikh Riots: US court asks Sonia Gandhi to show passport