"We are planning on this (to initiate training for civilians). As part of a small public-police partnership, we are thinking of inviting and training young boys and girls keen on taking up adventure sports," Additional Commissioner of Police (Law & Order) Anjani Kumar told PTI.
Beginners will be imparted horse riding lessons and workshops will also be conducted for 15 to 20 days as part of the course, he said. "We will start the process (training for civilians) once the elections are over."
The horse-mounted police, generally deployed for crowd control, patrolling and ceremonial duties, are now being trained in sports and familiarised with traffic conditions.
"The mounted police unit has a sanctioned strength of 40 horses. We have procured about 12 new Indian thoroughbred horses. They are used by metropolitan police across the world as they are strong, taller and easy to train," Kumar said.
"Police horses, like policemen, need to have a lot of patience. They are required to be observant of their surroundings and show tolerance. We are training them for longer duty hours, primarily patrolling. Plans are afoot to purchase equipment like body protectors, face and eye protectors for horses," the officer said.