Central Industrial Security Force Raising Day is observed on March 10. The date commemorates the establishment of the force in 1969. For exam preparation, this is not only a day-based current-affairs fact; it also links to internal security, protection of critical infrastructure, and industrial security. CISF personnel protect airports, metro networks, nuclear plants, and major industrial facilities across India. That makes the topic relevant to governance and the economy because secure infrastructure supports public services, urban transport, and industrial activity. Reading these four protected categories together helps retain that the force secures airports, metro networks, nuclear plants, and large industrial facilities.

CISF is treated as a Central Armed Police Force and comes under the Ministry of Home Affairs. In prelims, questions can directly test the date, the establishment year, the parent ministry, and the kinds of establishments protected by the force. The static-GK linkage is with Central Armed Police Forces, industrial security, and infrastructure security. For RAS and UPSC-style preparation, this topic fits current affairs, Indian economy, and economic-political developments because it connects a dated national event with the security of facilities that keep transport, energy-sensitive installations, and industry functioning. The key recall line is simple: March 10 is CISF Raising Day, 1969 is the establishment year, and the protected sectors include airports, metro networks, nuclear plants, and major industrial facilities.