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The Centre and states have been dragging their feet on long overdue changes

Still Loading... Police Reforms
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The Delhi High Court order of December 17, 2018, convicting Congress leader Sajjan Kumar in the 1984 riots has again brought into focus the urgent need to insulate police from extraneous influences, especially politicians. The riots saw an 바카라œenormous human tragedy바카라 when 2,733 Sikhs were brutally murdered in New Delhi alone in a communal frenzy unleashed in the first week of November 1984.

The court recorded that there were concerted efforts not to register cases against the guilty, and in those which were registered, investigation was not done properly바카라”even when investigation was undertaken, it was not carried to the logical conclusion of filing a charge-sheet. The court went on to deplore the 바카라œapathy of the Delhi Police바카라 and observed that it did not inspire confidence among the victims. Moreover, the court also lashed at the metropolitan police for its 바카라œactive connivance in the brutal murders being perpetrated바카라.

The Delhi HC did not mince its words. 바카라œA majority of the perpetrators of these horrific mass crimes enjoyed political patronage and were aided by an indifferent law enforcement agency바카라. Delhi Police could not have had a worse indictment. Not that the other agencies acquitted themselves with any glory. Even the then prime minister, Rajiv Gandhi, in a veiled defence of the riots, had said at the time: 바카라œWhen a big tree falls, the Earth does shake a little바카라.

There were no less than ten committees/commissions which looked into the tragedy, but the criminals managed to dodge prosecution and punishment. The Justice Ranganath Mishra Commission, which submitted its report in 1986, was a disgrace. He gave clean chit to Congress leaders and said that it was spontaneous violence resulting from anger, grief and hatred for Indira Gandhi바카라™s assassins which gradually transformed into a riot 바카라œwith participation and monitoring thereof by anti-socials바카라.

What is then the option before the country? Do we want to continue with the police dispensation as it is and run the risk of bearing more 바카라œcrimes against humanity바카라 or should we reform it so that it becomes an instrument of service to the people?

The Supreme Court judgment of September 22, 2006, was expected to bring about a radical change in the functioning of police in India. It was expected to transform what had hitherto been an instrument to uphold the partisan interests of the ruling class into an instrument to uphold the rule of law. Twelve years down the line, progress has been tardy notwithstanding Justice Thomas expressing in 2010 his sense of 바카라œdismay over the total indifference바카라 of the states to police reforms and Justice Verma urging all states in 2012 to comply with the apex court바카라™s directions 바카라œto tackle systemic problems in policing바카라. The executive orders passed by the state governments and the Acts legislated by seventeen states are all contrary to the letter and spirit in varying degrees of the judicial directions.

What is particularly disappointing is that the Union government, which should have given lead in the matter of police reforms, has also been dragging its feet. It has yet to pass the Model Police Act drafted as far back as 2006 by Soli Sorabjee. What is worse, it has been supporting the state governments which have filed applications for modifications in the Supreme Court바카라™s directions.

At stake are not only the life, liberty and human rights of the citizens of the country, the democratic structure itself may collapse one day. We saw what happened during the Emergency when, as recorded by the Shah Commission, 바카라œthe police was used and allowed themselves to be used for purposes some of which were, to say the least, questionable바카라. The increasing number of persons of criminal background in state assemblies and Parliament are already eating into the vitals of our democracy. Economic development, of which we feel so proud, is also likely to be jeopardised if the law and order machinery doesn바카라™t get the much-needed upgrade. What happened in Haryana during the reservation agitation in 2016, where property worth Rs 20,000 crore was devastated, should not be forgotten.

If the executive does not give up its 바카라˜zamindari바카라™ over the police, we may, as the Delhi High Court warned, continue to see the familiar pattern of mass killings: Mumbai in 1993, Gujarat in 2002 and Muzaffarnagar in 2013. Can the country afford that?

(The writer, a retired police chief, has been campaigning for  police reforms for over two decades)

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