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This draft concerns the CISF Fire Exam, understood from the title and cohort label as an entrance examination connected with the recruitment of personnel into the fire services wing of the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), a central armed police force functioning under the Ministry of Home Affairs of the Government of India. The CISF, in addition to its industrial and infrastructure security mandate, maintains a dedicated fire wing that provides fire prevention, fire-fighting and related emergency response support at protected establishments. Recruitment to the various ranks of this wing is carried out through structured selection processes that typically include written examinations, physical efficiency and standards tests, trade or skill tests where applicable, document verification, and medical examination.
This editorial draft is being prepared as a starting scaffold for IndiaWiki editors. It deliberately refrains from stating specific dates, syllabus items, marking schemes, vacancy figures, eligibility cut-offs, fee structures, or selection statistics, since such details vary by recruitment cycle and notification, and must be sourced from the official CISF recruitment portal or the relevant gazette notification before publication. Editors are requested to treat the sections below as a neutral framework to be verified, expanded and rewritten with citations.
The Central Industrial Security Force was constituted as a uniformed central armed police force tasked with the protection of critical infrastructure across India. Over time, its responsibilities have expanded to include security cover at airports, seaports, metro systems, government buildings, heritage installations, and various public sector undertakings. Within this wider mandate, the CISF Fire Wing functions as a specialised cadre devoted to fire safety operations at certain protected premises, working in coordination with on-site safety teams.
Recruitment to the fire wing is generally undertaken to fill posts at constable, head constable, sub-inspector and other ranks, with each level having its own eligibility criteria, physical standards and examination pattern. Notifications for these recruitments are usually released by the CISF directorate or through the Staff Selection Commission, depending on the post. The "CISF Fire Exam" is therefore best understood as a generic descriptor for the written examination component of one or more such recruitment drives, rather than a single fixed examination with an unchanging structure.
Editors should note that the precise administering authority, examination cycle, and pattern have changed from time to time and must be confirmed against the latest official notification before any specific claim is included in the article.
From a public-interest perspective, recruitment examinations connected to the CISF Fire Wing are significant for several reasons. They form one of the formal entry routes into a central uniformed service for candidates interested in fire-fighting and emergency response careers. They contribute to the staffing of fire safety arrangements at strategically important installations, including transport hubs and energy facilities, where lapses can have serious consequences. The examination also serves as a benchmark for aspirants preparing through coaching institutes, self-study materials and government-recognised training centres.
For an encyclopaedic article, the significance section should ideally explain the role of the fire wing within the wider CISF structure, the kind of duties personnel selected through this process are expected to perform, and the general place of such recruitments within India's broader landscape of central armed police force examinations. Editors are advised to keep the tone descriptive and avoid promotional language, comparative rankings, or claims about difficulty levels unless these are supported by reliable secondary sources such as mainstream news coverage or official statements.
The following checklist outlines areas that editors should research and verify against primary sources, especially the official CISF recruitment notifications, before adding specific content to the article. Each item is listed in neutral form, without asserting any particular value:
Editors are specifically cautioned against adding cut-off marks, year-wise vacancy numbers, success ratios, or rankings of coaching centres, since these are frequently inaccurate online and require strong sourcing.
For the published version, editors may consider organising the article along the following lines, adjusting headings to IndiaWiki conventions:
Each section should be backed by inline citations. Where information is unavailable or contested, it is preferable to omit the point rather than to speculate. The article should remain focused on the examination itself and not drift into a general description of CISF, which can be linked to its main article.
This draft has been intentionally kept free of specific factual claims that could not be verified from the title and cohort alone. Editors taking this forward are requested to observe the following:
Once verified content is added, this scaffold should be substantially rewritten so that the final article reads as a coherent encyclopaedic entry rather than as a checklist.
To be added by editors. Suggested reference categories include: official CISF recruitment notifications; Staff Selection Commission notices, where applicable; Ministry of Home Affairs releases; the Gazette of India; and reports from established Indian newspapers covering specific recruitment cycles. Each factual claim in the final article should be supported by an inline citation to one of these sources.