NEW DELHI, India
As the G20 summit kicks off in New Delhi this weekend, Indian authorities are pulling out all the stops to ensure security.
The summit will be hosted at
the state-of-the-art Bharat Mandapam convention center at Pragati Maidan in
central Delhi.
With guests including United States President Joe Biden, German Chancellor Olaf
Scholz, Chinese Premier Li Qiang and other global leaders, authorities
are not taking any chances.
Approximately 130,000 security
personnel will be deployed during the summit, including an 80,000-strong
contingent from the Delhi police.
The G20 summit venue and
hotels where the leaders stay will be cordoned off.
Trained commandos of the
Indo-Tibetan Border Police armed with long-range weapons will also be
positioned in vantage points.
Schools, banks, business
establishments and all government departments will remain shut as enhanced
security measures come into place. Even food and e-commerce delivery companies
will not be allowed to operate in areas adjoining the summit's venue.
Over a thousand flights will
encounter disruptions through cancellations or adjustments during this period
as authorities intend to keep airspace and terminals free of congestion.
Nearly 300 Delhi-bound trains
are also likely to be affected, with passengers asked to deboard ahead of their
destinations.
A slew of restrictive curbs
will kick in from midnight Friday to ensure a smooth flow of traffic in the
national capital during the event that formally kicks off on Saturday.
Road closures and diversions
have already led to longer travel times than usual for average citizens.
"No heavy or medium goods
vehicles, except those classified as essential or emergency, will be permitted
to travel on the expressway towards Delhi," said Virender Vij, a deputy
commissioner of police.
Security agencies are
preparing for all contingencies as protests have been seen during previous G20
summits in London, Toronto and Hamburg.
It is for this reason that
checking and surveillance have been beefed up at major streets, government
buildings and security installations during the summit.
"The venue site and its
surrounding areas will be under gridlock especially in the controlled zone. We
have sanitized the area and 100 police control room vans with quick reaction
teams will tackle any untoward incidents during the G20 summit," a senior
security official told DW.
Ahead of the summit, several
dry runs and rehearsals have been conducted to ensure that equipment,
fountains, lighting, LED panels and all emergency vehicles function without a
snag.
Key parts of Delhi have
already got a facelift as fountains, sculptures and summit logos decorate
roundabouts, while lights adorn iconic installations like India Gate and Qutab
Minar.
Huge cutouts and billboards
of Prime
Minister Narendra Modi have also been installed at traffic
intersections.
According to one estimate,
700,000 plants have been installed along with elaborate floral arrangements put
up near the summit venue, hotels and other areas with many visitors.
Nine government agencies, from
civic bodies to departments under the Ministry of Defense, have spent large
sums on work ranging from horticulture improvement to G20 branding.
The capital is not new to
hosting large international conferences, and has hosted major summits in the
past, including the Non-Aligned Movement and the Commonwealth Heads of
Government (CHOGM) summits in 1983, and the India-Africa Forum Summit (IAFS) in
2015.
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