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Police, there for you, always or never?
I HAPPENED to be in the United Kingdom last year for a programme.
There was a small news item about the detention, in a police
station, of the son of the then and the present British Prime
Minister, Mr. Tony Blair, for being found in a drunken state.
There was no phone call and no transfers and postings of the
officials who did it. This year in July 2001, Ms. Jenna Bush,
daughter of President Bush of the United States, was fined $600
(or approximately Rs. 30,000) and her driving licence was
suspended for 30 days on charges of underage drinking and trying
to use someone else's identification to buy liquor. Ms. Bush has
been ordered $100 in court fee, perform 36 hours of community
service and attend a session, where victims of alcohol related
crimes discuss their experience. If she completes the
requirements and stays out of trouble for three months, the
charge will be dismissed. Unlike the Indian politicians or
criminals, Ms. Jenna Bush pleaded no contest. The underage
drinking will be considered a conviction and will go on her
record.
The former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, Mr. Karunanidhi, was
arrested by the police in an early morning swoop on charges of
corruption and later on, the charges were dropped. Two Central
Ministers were arrested for obstructing and preventing the police
officials from discharging their duties and were later released.
The Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister, Mr. Digvijay Singh, has said
that he would not hesitate to arrest Central Ministers if they
break the law. "Whether the person concerned is a Union Minister
or anybody else, the law should take its course". Very brave
words and indeed commendable in their own way.
But let us see, what is the ground reality in our country. The
British themselves, who had fathered the Indian Police, set up a
commission in 1902/1903, which after examining witnesses and the
performance of the police observed: "There can be no doubt that
the police force throughout the country is in a most
unsatisfactory condition, that abuses are common everywhere, that
this involves great injury to the people and discredit to the
government, and that radical reforms are urgently necessary.
These efforts will cost much, because the department has hitherto
been starved, but they must be effected."
The British were not really interested in reforming the police,
as it was their main instrument of sustaining the British Raj in
India. Nothing much has been done from the time of the Police
Commission of 1902-03 till almost now. The First National Police
Commission of Free India (1977-1981), under late Dharam Vira
observed: "Functioning under the constraints and handicaps of an
outmoded system, the police performance has undoubtedly fallen
short of public expectation. The present culture of the police
system appears a continuation of what obtained under the British
regime, when the police functioned ruthlessly as an agent for
sustaining the government in power. In public estimates, the
police appear as an agency more to implement and enforce the
objectives of the government in power, as distinct from enforcing
laws as such as an independent and impartial agency. The dividing
line between the objectives of the government in power as such on
one side, and the interests and expectations of the ruling
political party on the other side, gets blurred in actual
practice, and the image of the police, as an impartial law
enforcement agency, suffers in consequence."
Genuine apprehensions
The policemen have genuine apprehensions that if they do not
yield to the political dictates, they will face adverse
consequences for doing even the right things, which may not be to
the liking of the political masters. This affects the performance
of duties, on the right lines, by the police. The people have
their own grievances against the police. These grievances, which
are as under, have a ring of truth about them.
(1) The people believe that police indulge in favouritism. The
enforcement of laws by the police is selective, anti-poor and
pro-rich. The police function only when the cases involve
influential or powerful people.
(2) The police are generally discourteous, even to respectable
persons. They also use abusive language. Even the aggrieved and
complainants are not spared. The result of this perception is
that even honest citizens avoid doing anything to help the law
enforcement agencies. They feel that it is best to avoid the
police and keep them at two arms length, even for redress of
their genuine grievances.
(3) The people also feel that the complaints of the poor and
uninfluential are ignored by the police. They also feel that the
redress of any grievances of the common man by the police is only
an illusion, notwithstanding the claims of the senior officers or
the public relations exercises done.
(4) The police officials themselves do not comply with the laws.
It can be seen everyday in the violation of traffic laws by the
police officials who openly demand and accept bribes on the
roadside at many places, especially in the enforcement of social,
local and special laws pertaining to traffic, hawkers,
prostitutes and other weak groups. Policemen are the biggest
violators of laws. It is they who bring all talk of fair law
enforcement into ridicule. The police also make out false cases
against the public, indulge in illegal methods, like the use of
the third degree, beating, torturing, wrongful confinement, and
detention of the people, who may have nothing to do with any
crime. All this is done in the name of law enforcement, but
actually to extort money, as part of their universal corruption.
The police do not act speedily even in genuine cases, unless an
influential person is involved. The rich can purchase the police
inaction to suit their requirements.
Political intervention
It is true that police should be accountable for their actions. A
constitutional system of government, based on democratic
principles, cannot function without an effective, efficient and
accountable police. Constitutionally, the Home or Police Minister
has been made accountable for the performance of the police.
Unlike the other executive wings of the government, the police
have maximum visibility. Visibility takes away anonymity. The
accountability of the police means answerability for the proper
performance of their duties to the satisfaction of the party, for
whose benefit its duties are being discharged. Constitutionally,
the police are accountable to the elected representatives of the
people in State legislatures and Parliament in case of the Union
Territories. The concept of ministerial responsibility has given
an impression to the political masters that they are authorised
to guide and intervene in all functions of the police in all
areas. Most often, all intervention takes the form of only oral
directions, which are difficult to prove later on in a court of
inquiry or in case the politicians set up commissions of inquiry
to look into the conduct of the police. It happened with the
author, when the then Prime Minister wanted to bail out a Chief
Minister who was clearly involved in a scam, being investigated
by the CBI.
Professor David H. Balyey says: "In India today, a dual system of
criminal justice has grown up, the one of the law and the other
of politics. With respect at least to the police, decisions made
by the police officials, about the application of law, are
frequently subject to partisan review or direction by the elected
representatives. The autonomy of the police officials, in
specific and routine application of law, has been severally
curtailed. This is not only true of law and order situations.
People accused of crimes have got into the habit of appealing to
political figures for remission from the law. Police officials,
throughout India, have grown accustomed to calculating the likely
political effect of any enforcement action they contemplate.
Fearing for their careers and especially their postings, they
have become anxious and cynical. But everywhere, officers are
expected to be held personally accountable by the politicians,
even more than by their superior officers for enforcement action
taken in the course of duty. Altogether, then the rule of law in
modern India, the frame upon which justice hinges, has been
undermined by the rules of politics. Supervision in the name of
democracy has eroded the foundations upon which the impartiality
depends in a criminal justice system." The above observations
clearly indicate that the police are being used by the political
masters, irrespective of the parties in power, for their gains
and ends. It aptly explains away the arrest of the opposition
leaders by the ruling parties and that is how the game of see-saw
goes on.
For settling political scores
Employing the police to settle political scores by any ruling
political party is a nothing but subverting the rule of law.
Examples of settling scores by using police abound. The earliest
known prominent case in this category was the arrest of late
Indira Gandhi by the Janata Government in 1977 and the latest
being the arrest of the former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, Mr.
Karunanidhi, on June 30, 2001. The government has to make up its
mind for insulating the police from the politics and the
politicians of the country. This is the only correct way of
deploying the police, for duties for which law has created it.
In the present arrangement and environment, the policemen have
genuine apprehensions, that if they do not yield to the political
dictates, and do their biddings, there will be personal adverse
consequences. Such consequences arise even for doing the right
things. It is not necessary that any action should be something
right and in accordance with the law. Now the acid test is that
it should be to the liking of the political masters. This
expectation and apprehension affects the performance of duties by
the police officials.
A study conducted by the Indian Institute of Public Opinion, at
the instance of the Home Ministry regarding "The Image of the
Police in India", showed the following conclusions:
1. Political interference is seen by the public as a major factor
contributing to the poor image of the police and manifests itself
in the misuse and abuse of police powers and disregard of the law
by the police.
2. People consider political interference with police as a
greater evil than even corruption.
3. Political interference appears more pronounced in rural areas
than in urban areas.
Typical situations
Some typical situations or matters in which pressure is brought
to bear on the police by political executive or other extraneous
sources are listed below:
1. Arrest or non-arrest of a person against whom a case is taken
up for investigating.
2. Deliberate handcuffing of a person in police custody merely to
humiliate him.
3. Release or non-release on bail after arrest.
4. Suppression of material evidence that becomes available during
searches by the police.
5. Inclusion or non-inclusion in the chargesheet placed in the
court on conclusion of investigation.
6. Posting or non-posting of police force in an area of
apprehended trouble to create an effect to the advantage of one
party or the other.
7. Foisting of false criminal cases against political
functionaries for achieving political ends.
8. Discretionary enforcement of laws, while dealing with public
order situations, with emphasis on severity and ruthlessness in
regard to persons opposed to the ruling party.
9. Taking persons into preventive custody to immobilise them from
legitimate political activity in opposition to the party in
power.
10. Manoeuvring police intervention by exaggerating a non-
cognisable offence, or engineering a false complaint, to gain
advantage over any other party in a situation, which will lie
outside the domain of police action in the normal course.
11. Preparation of malicious and tendentious intelligence reports
to facilitate action against an opponent.
Transfers or suspensions are used as weapons to make the
officials toe the line of the political masters. Almost all
political parties have used these weapons. Some have done it with
finesse, and some crudely. Most of the time, the first casualty
on the assumption of a new government in a State is the chief of
police and the Chief Secretary. They are shifted to make room for
more pliable officials. Pressure on the police takes a variety of
shapes and forms, ranging from a promise of career advancement
and preferential treatment in service matters if the demand is
yielded to. Adverse treatment in service matters is threatened if
the pressure is resisted. It is not always possible to punish an
officer with a statutory punishment under the Discipline and
Appeal Rules. Adequate grounds and a prescribed procedure are
required to be followed. However, it is a very easy to subject
any police official to an administrative action, by way of
transfer or suspension on the basis of any excuse. The suspension
acts as a humiliating factor. A transfer can be an economic blow.
It can also lead to the disruption of the police officer's
family, and children's education, etc.
Transfer and suspension are the most potent weapons in the hands
of the politician to make the police do his implied or
specifically expressed or expected will. Transfer has become an
industry and nobody is bothered whether the same is justified or
not on normal administrative grounds. This has resulted in a
curious situation, where some obliging subordinate officials have
developed such a clout with the political leadership that their
seniors pamper them and depend on them to stay in their jobs.
Some of them have such a high influence with the political
leadership that if any senior official tries to rein in them,
they get him the boot and transfer. The politically directed, ad-
hoc and arbitrary transfers, sometimes due to the failure of the
police officials to keep the local politicians happy, have become
the norm these days. This approach has seriously affected the
discipline, morale, chain of command, and strict adherence to the
laws of the land. In one case, one Sub-Inspector of Police has
119 transfers in 29 years of his service. The interests of real
professional service to the public have been sacrificed at the
altar of political expediency and appeasement.
Source of pressure
The source of pressure emanates not only from political
functionaries in government but also from outside the government
who are not connected in any manner with different political
parties including the ruling party. Such people operate through
links of money, caste, community, regional affinity, etc.
Sometime back in the police recruitment in some States, only
persons belonging to the community or caste of the serving Chief
Minister were inducted.
Interference with any police system by the politicians encourages
some police personnel to believe that their career advancement
does not depend on the merits of their professional competence,
but on the favours of the politicians who count. Politicking and
hobnobbing appears more worthwhile in the estimation of an
average police officer. Some police officers spend all the time
in deliberate and sustained cultivation of politicians to the
detriment of their normal professional jobs.
Subordinate officers know, see and realise that their superior
officers count little in the ultimate disposal of a matter which
lies in sphere of duty and this leads to atrophying of the
supervisory structure. In this connection the Home Ministry in
the past had submitted a note to the Conference of the Chief
Ministers and Home Ministers convened by the then Union Home
Minister; it said "There is a feeling in all States that
interference not only in the matter of posting and transfers, but
also in the matter of arrests, investigations and filing of
chargesheets is widespread. The principal grievance of the
policeman is that if there is any unwillingness to comply with
unlawful or improper suggestions, the persons concerned are
harassed or humiliated."
The note observed that the Government of India would like to
impress upon the Chief Ministers that efforts should be made "to
ensure that there is no unlawful interference in the exercise of
statutory powers. Secondly, in the matters of posting and
transfers, States should seek to restore leadership and
effectiveness of the official hierarchy, with a view to ensure
that the requisite rapport between the officers and men is not
eroded." At the end of the deliberations of this conference, the
participants agreed that the "problem arising out of interference
will bear effective solutions at the political level." But
unfortunately even decades after the discussion, the position has
not only remained unaltered but has gone from bad to worse.
What is required is a crusade for moral regeneration to bring
about a change, which is the need of the hour. The present
government should not shirk from its historic responsibility. It
is claimed to be a government of a party with a difference. Let
it prove that it is different. This is the least it owes to the
present and the future generations.
JOGINDER SINGH
Former CBI Director
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