<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://www.blogger.com/styles/atom.css" type="text/css"?><feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' xmlns:georss='http://www.georss.org/georss' xmlns:gd='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005' xmlns:thr='http://purl.org/syndication/thread/1.0'><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3842343</id><updated>2011-04-21T22:03:35.301-07:00</updated><title type='text'>CRIME, POLITICS AND THE POLICE</title><subtitle type='html'></subtitle><link rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#feed' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://police1.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/3842343/posts/default?max-results=100'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://police1.blogspot.com/'/><link rel='hub' href='http://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com/'/><author><name>praveen</name><uri>http://www.blogger.com/profile/16356536646210674851</uri><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><generator version='7.00' uri='http://www.blogger.com'>Blogger</generator><openSearch:totalResults>1</openSearch:totalResults><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>100</openSearch:itemsPerPage><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3842343.post-82678607</id><published>2002-10-08T00:23:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2002-10-29T20:40:23.000-08:00</updated><title type='text'></title><content type='html'>&lt;title&gt;praveen kumar on Indian police,policing and the UPSC and poems on love and human nature. &lt;/title&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;META NAME="Keywords" CONTENT="police, policing, UPSC, Union Public Service Commission, Indian, post,independent, job, culture, corruption, criminalisation, politicisation, crime, politics, crossroads, tough, decisions, modernisation, reorganisation, response, praveen, kumar, superintendent, professional, investigation, law, order, administration, quality, civil, service, healthy, CBI, management, economic, poems, love, portraits, passion, unknown, horizons, poet,  beauty, Sapna, dream, light, divine, my, birds, life, death, song, discovery, pristine, immortal, soul, nature, joy, life, supreme, path, pride"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;META NAME="Description" CONTENT="An analytical study of the philosophy and field dynamics of the policing in practice with live instances from the field penned by a Police Officer from India. The hypocrisy and the sad state of affairs in the profession in India and the UPSC as its appointing agent are effectively brought out by the author. His poems are a holistic portrayal of the life situations with the sensibilities and emotions of a poet entwined with the cosmic view and philosophy that underly all human affairs."&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;marquee scrolldelay="200" bgcolor="BLACK"&gt;&lt;FONT COLOR=WHITE&gt;&lt;B&gt;"An analytical study of the philosophy and field dynamics of the policing in practice with live instances from the field penned by a Police Officer from India. The hypocrisy and the sad state of affairs in the profession in India and the UPSC as its appointing agent are effectively brought out by the author. His poems are a holistic portrayal of the life situations with the sensibilities and emotions of a poet entwined with the cosmic view and philosophy that underly all human affairs."&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/marquee&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;CRIME, POLITICS AND THE POLICE&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Crime, politics and the police are the three meiths of the vicious triangle within&lt;br /&gt;which the future of democratic India and its free people is inexorably involuted.&lt;br /&gt;Though wealthy industrial and commercial houses form the fourth dimension of&lt;br /&gt;the unfortunate predicament, their techniques are as yet limited to manipulative&lt;br /&gt;strategies to gain an increscent hold over political power by remote control in&lt;br /&gt;pursuit of their professional interests and seld they jump on the indignity of&lt;br /&gt;involving themselves with the vicious triangle of crime, politics and the police. It&lt;br /&gt;is that their wealth flows to the spendthrift chests of the troika and operates as&lt;br /&gt;catalyst in reducing the normal life of free citizens to a welter of uncertainties and&lt;br /&gt;unending hardships. However, their anfractuosity in the process of atrophy is rather&lt;br /&gt;distant and indirect unlike the trio of crime, politics and the police Politicians&lt;br /&gt;protectcriminals from the grip of the law while criminals reciprocate by acting as&lt;br /&gt;their henchmen in handling underground activities. The police goes officiously to&lt;br /&gt;politicians en revanche for job protection and strikes an understanding with&lt;br /&gt;criminals to ease personal financial interests. Thus works this nexus of vile&lt;br /&gt;power-brokers, preying on innocent people, bloating itself on the blood of the&lt;br /&gt;hapless masses.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Power and wealth&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In a blinkered system like ours, where power and wealth are the ultimate virtues,&lt;br /&gt;where power and wealth in themselves stimulate mutual growth to the exclusion of&lt;br /&gt;all other dimensions of life, it is no wonder, the people of this poor country succumb&lt;br /&gt;to the trappings of power and wealth at the cost of all virtues, values, pride, dignity&lt;br /&gt;and human decency. In an increasingly competitive and complex world where every&lt;br /&gt;day more mouths are added to share limited resources, where the principle of the&lt;br /&gt;survival of the fittest operates to its immane logical end and where the basic needs&lt;br /&gt;of survival and decency can be assured only with power and wealth, people&lt;br /&gt;naturally go all out to ramp the ladder of power and wealth by whatever means and&lt;br /&gt;cost. In the process, justice and morality become casualties and criminality raises&lt;br /&gt;its ugly head as an instrument to achieve otherwise impossible objects. This is how&lt;br /&gt;politics and crime knit together in the fabric of Indian public life.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Police and politics&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The story of the police is somewhat different. As the catchpole of the nation's&lt;br /&gt;administration, the police enjoys tremendous power over vast fields of human&lt;br /&gt;activities with responsibilities to life and death of the hoi polloi as well as&lt;br /&gt;dignitaries. In this sense, the police is the cutting edge of the state power and its&lt;br /&gt;ultimate bearer. No power can be its own sans the police on its side as an executioner&lt;br /&gt;and loyal watch-dog. This is why, politicians felt the need for wooing police to their&lt;br /&gt;side in their activities. The police of independent India has become an easy prey to&lt;br /&gt;the power baits of smarter politicians by the reason of their failing strength of&lt;br /&gt;character and talent. Their greed, unsound social background, lack of commitment&lt;br /&gt;to good values and failure to comprehend police virtues in the right perspective&lt;br /&gt;make them willing partners in whatever politicians do or intend to do. They refuse&lt;br /&gt;to look beyond their political masters with their dispensations of job favours; and&lt;br /&gt;so law, justice, righteousness, professional ethics, morality, decency, human dig-&lt;br /&gt;nity, common good of people, national interests and even conscience, otherwise&lt;br /&gt;common to any human being, have become invalid nonsense to them. The police,&lt;br /&gt;sans sound character and personal integrity is no more than a country dog which is&lt;br /&gt;what the Indian police has become in free India. The politicians, inebriated with&lt;br /&gt;new power, smartly brought these weaklings to absolute submission and hold them&lt;br /&gt;on a tight leash to be their personal watch dogs and personal gendarmes in requital&lt;br /&gt;for favourable job placements, undue promotions and other largition from time to&lt;br /&gt;time. Nothing is valued higher than this largess and its dispensers by the new police&lt;br /&gt;of India. It is how the police was involuted in the conspiracy against decent public&lt;br /&gt;life in India.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Police and crime&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It was a hop and skip for the police from the plangent world of politics to the&lt;br /&gt;mysterious world of crime and the underworld. The police became a weapon of&lt;br /&gt;politicians to bring about the subjugation of the crime world to prise their resources&lt;br /&gt;for the political ends. They thus made good use of the decreasing strength of&lt;br /&gt;character of the police in forging a nexus between the police and criminals in&lt;br /&gt;furtherance of their own telos. With a weak spine to hold itself and hapless in the&lt;br /&gt;face of odds, the police is only too pleased to follow the footsteps of its political&lt;br /&gt;masters as the cardinal principle of policing. In changed circumstances, discipline&lt;br /&gt;and subordination which form the basic connecting link of the police hierarchy, lost&lt;br /&gt;all their shades of meaning and are interpreted as dunny and blind subservience to&lt;br /&gt;those who have power, seeking personal interests. And politicians easily led the&lt;br /&gt;police to the despicable cul de sac of the nexus with criminals, the very people&lt;br /&gt;whom both are supposed to control and bring to book for antisocial acil-'ities. With&lt;br /&gt;politicians as the custodians of power en wrier to the hilt to support, the police&lt;br /&gt;plunged lock, stock and barrel into the lucrative crime world; the consectaneous&lt;br /&gt;wealth and comforts were in no way less sweet than the hard-earned money of&lt;br /&gt;law-abiding society. This is how the nexus between the police and crime world was&lt;br /&gt;established.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Dangerous nexus&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The trio of manipulators is a dangerous force to reckon with, in the Indian&lt;br /&gt;democratic situation. Cohered as a tight-knit power-block, they have permeated&lt;br /&gt;into all conceivable facets of Indian public life with the sole intention of garnering&lt;br /&gt;all the benefits and pilferages of the inefficient public administration, for sharing&lt;br /&gt;among themselves in line with the proverb that one who dines well in a whore's&lt;br /&gt;house is wise. The tragedy here is that the vice is perpetrated by those whom the&lt;br /&gt;public trust as their benefactors and protectors. The amoral side of this operation&lt;br /&gt;does not seem to have affected either the police or politicians in any way and the&lt;br /&gt;vile cabal against the Indian public goes on unabated. It seems that all actors in this&lt;br /&gt;tragic drama think that Indian democracy is a free-for-all field to grab to the&lt;br /&gt;maximum in a world where all look for themselves and only those who grab the&lt;br /&gt;most survive. This approach is certain to undermine not only the democratic setup&lt;br /&gt;of the nation, but also its very social fabric. The blame for this sad end should&lt;br /&gt;squarely be borne by the ugly troika of politicians, criminals and the police.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Dilemma of Indian politics&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Not that politics is all bad. It is, by definition, governance of state through&lt;br /&gt;popular leadership. The malaise of the present Indian politics lies in its tilt to&lt;br /&gt;popularity at the elimination of 'leadership' and more dangerously, 'popularity'&lt;br /&gt;being made a serious business proposition to be attended to by spending hard cash as an investment to earn returns in multiple proportions. How popularity can be&lt;br /&gt;won by investment remains a mystery of the democracy. However, sine dubio,&lt;br /&gt;popularity is won on the field pro rata to an investment in Indian situation. It is res&lt;br /&gt;judicata that nothing means as much to the Indian electorate as the money and&lt;br /&gt;power to prod them to cast their votes for a particular candidate. The history of&lt;br /&gt;independent India makes it patent that honesty, patriotism, quality, service, excel-&lt;br /&gt;lence and even charisma have become casualties vis a vis money and power on the&lt;br /&gt;Indian election stage. In this situation, a vicious equation is formed wherein&lt;br /&gt;political power is equated with electoral popularity, which in turn is equated with&lt;br /&gt;money and power, which can be had only through political patronage. The vicious&lt;br /&gt;circle has helped to create a block of manipulative extortionists as divided from the&lt;br /&gt;passive common public. Politics too has its honest and patriotic people who are&lt;br /&gt;committed to the commune bonum. But, sadly, they are caught in the grind of a&lt;br /&gt;system which does not let them surface to prominence unless they come to terms&lt;br /&gt;with it and adopt the venal proposition of winning elections to make money to win&lt;br /&gt;the next election. Only those who correctly grasp the inner dynamics of this and&lt;br /&gt;adapt to its mechanics can hope to make a headway. Others are bound to sink. When&lt;br /&gt;the system itself made the election a venal mechanism, corrupt practices that rope&lt;br /&gt;in criminals and police cannot remain far away from the scene.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Criminalisation of politics&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Whom should we blame for this hapless position? Certainly not the politicians&lt;br /&gt;or their auxiliaries like criminals and police who are unfortunate by-products of the&lt;br /&gt;grind. They are created by the situation, arising from a system which is misfit to&lt;br /&gt;(he people to whom it was devised. The blame lies either on the Indian people who&lt;br /&gt;are impair to the democratic system evolved for them, because of their unen-&lt;br /&gt;lightened and venal conscience which is so dim-witted that virtues like honesty,&lt;br /&gt;service, patriotism, quality and excellence can make no dent on it at all; or it lies&lt;br /&gt;with the political system devised for them which failed to take their psychological&lt;br /&gt;makeup into account and ipso facto led to the problem of maladjustment in national&lt;br /&gt;life. Otherwise, how can we explain criminals and goondas winning elections with&lt;br /&gt;impunity even while rioting and murders were committed at their behest on the eve&lt;br /&gt;of elections itself. The fact is that the chance of winning an election often is pro&lt;br /&gt;rata to the aura of a tough image built around the candidate. It is these people who&lt;br /&gt;win elections and rule this country! It is these people whom the Indian electorate&lt;br /&gt;prefers to invest with powers to safeguard their interests! Obviously, the Indian&lt;br /&gt;electorate lacks the foresightedness and vision to understand the consequences of&lt;br /&gt;its irresponsible decision. It is yet too immature to take decisions about the interests&lt;br /&gt;of the nation and see how national interests are closely linked to its personal&lt;br /&gt;interests. It is yet to broaden its perspective to include the life of the nation as an integral part of its own. Long term and rational decisions are alien to its nature.&lt;br /&gt;Immediate selfish interests and a parochial outlook continue to be the driving force&lt;br /&gt;of all its actions and decisions, whether it be on the matters of national importance&lt;br /&gt;or personal concern. In most parts of India, it is money, arrack, sari, threat, fear of&lt;br /&gt;landlords or the blazening propaganda of a candidate that influence it to decide as&lt;br /&gt;to whom to vote for. How can the avenir of this country be safe in the hands of such&lt;br /&gt;an electorate and its elected leaders? How can an indifferent and irresponsible&lt;br /&gt;electorate provide honest and efficient leadership to the nation? This weakness of&lt;br /&gt;the electorate has ultimately left Indian politics in the heath of violence and&lt;br /&gt;manipulative extortions, with the instruments meant to protect them mowing the&lt;br /&gt;field. Saner elements in politics, who found survival difficile, have left the field,&lt;br /&gt;giving way to the elements which are more suited to what is required in the field.&lt;br /&gt;It is how politics has become a pit of junk from a class of dedicated and virtuous&lt;br /&gt;leaders. The credibility which is the pith of any political life is the biggest casualty&lt;br /&gt;in Indian politics. People are more and more disillusioned with the extant political&lt;br /&gt;institutions and the percentage of the electorate that takes the trouble of going to&lt;br /&gt;polling booths to cast votes is steadily decreasing from election to election. It is an&lt;br /&gt;open secret that an election is an opening for a candidate to invest money to reap&lt;br /&gt;wealth, comfort and power for the next five years. And how he reaps the wealth,&lt;br /&gt;comfort and power again is not a mystery at all. It is corruption and misuse of public&lt;br /&gt;money. If he is ambitious and intends to promote his career interests, there is no&lt;br /&gt;way out in the existing system but to resort to pulling strings and pursuing other&lt;br /&gt;more deadly methods, often with the active collusion of the officious criminals and&lt;br /&gt;police.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Political murders&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Political murders are common features these days in India. When a political&lt;br /&gt;adversary grows to be an irritant, too serious for corn fort, he is seen to be eliminated.&lt;br /&gt;No career politician wants to stain his name with a murder case and get his name&lt;br /&gt;registered as a criminal in a police station. He does the work through his faithful&lt;br /&gt;underworld henchmen whom he keeps in good humour always for being available&lt;br /&gt;for such a need, by providing them political support and protection. For this, he&lt;br /&gt;keeps the police at his side. This is easily done by intervening in police postings&lt;br /&gt;and helping to get early promotions for favoured ones.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Booth capturing&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A candidate for an election may even resort to booth capturing through his&lt;br /&gt;criminal aides to facilitate his victory. This operation requires thorough planning&lt;br /&gt;and training of the men involved, apart from the willing cooperation of the police. An attempt at booth-capturing can succeed only with the intrenchant nexus between&lt;br /&gt;politicians, criminals and police for synergy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Political patronage&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The unhealthy nexus often leads to and facilitates other forms of crime. Cases&lt;br /&gt;of rioting, assault, kidnap, rape and blackmail, involving the supporters or relatives&lt;br /&gt;of politicians, criminals and police in furtherance of a political cabal are other usual&lt;br /&gt;forms of crime that result from the vicious nexus. Often, criminals and police are&lt;br /&gt;employed to create disturbances or inspire sensational crimes in furtherance of&lt;br /&gt;political goals. The losses of life and property involved in the wily schemes seld&lt;br /&gt;touch the conscience of either the politicians, the criminals or the police who are&lt;br /&gt;responsible for these dastardly acts. The political patronage and the nexus with&lt;br /&gt;police desensitize criminals to the process of law and justice; they are thus&lt;br /&gt;emboldened to commit more daring and ruthless crimes that endanger the life and&lt;br /&gt;property of the plebeians. The police, in its links with politicians on one hand and&lt;br /&gt;with criminals on the other, is in its new avatar as the protector of vested interests&lt;br /&gt;with no more commitment and passion for law and justice. It has become a&lt;br /&gt;discredited force, a willing instrument of power-brokers in a ruthless and violent&lt;br /&gt;cabal of power-games with no heart for the common man and the common cause.&lt;br /&gt;This is the requital the Indian electorate gets for letting its political system putrefy&lt;br /&gt;by its nonchalance and irresponsibility.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Politicisation of crime&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The overworld is just the tip of the real, raw world. There are more things hidden&lt;br /&gt;in this world than there are seen. This is soon realised by opportunist Indian&lt;br /&gt;politicians who seize the first available instance to enlist the support of criminals&lt;br /&gt;and underground operators for their nefarious designs. This in turn is a god-sent&lt;br /&gt;benison for criminals to restore their lost credibility and social standing with the&lt;br /&gt;help of their association with the custodians of power, apart from the security and&lt;br /&gt;protection from the police that ensues from the association. They promptly grab&lt;br /&gt;the opportunity to their advantage and show how useful they can be to politicians&lt;br /&gt;in their career-promotion designs and wreaking of personal vendettas. The ex-&lt;br /&gt;perience and professionalism of criminals is handy to politicians to execute their&lt;br /&gt;nasty operations without attracting the stigma attached to them.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The vast army of criminals has become a ready resource to them for use&lt;br /&gt;whenever need arises. This has given a sense of confidence and security to&lt;br /&gt;politicians, who are otherwise vulnerable in their highly uncertain, challenging and&lt;br /&gt;competitive environment. Often politicians have so much relied on criminals that&lt;br /&gt;the latter have became their most trusted lieutenants, even getting elected to legislature houses with their help and blessings. There have been instances in India,&lt;br /&gt;where prominent politicians have refused to disown their notorious criminal friends&lt;br /&gt;in public even after reaching the vertex of their political career. This shows the&lt;br /&gt;sway held by criminals over politicians in the Indian situation. It is a fact that no&lt;br /&gt;syndicate of organised crime in small and big cities anywhere in the world can&lt;br /&gt;survive even for a day without political patronage. Ergo, all syndicates of organised&lt;br /&gt;crime and their menace are the direct outcome of the intrenchant nexus between&lt;br /&gt;politicians and criminals, indeed with the police as bystanders.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Place of crime world&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;No criminal can take lightly the need for political patronage in running his crime&lt;br /&gt;syndicate. Be they smuggling syndicates, gambling houses, narcotics dealers or&lt;br /&gt;plain hoodlums, the only way to survive is to have comfortable political protection&lt;br /&gt;at the right levels. The crime syndicates en revanche, pay a good percentage of&lt;br /&gt;their criminal gain to the protectors. Thus, it is an arrangement to mutual advantage.&lt;br /&gt;The crime world also provides hoodlums as volunteers to perform challenging tasks&lt;br /&gt;during the election campaigns of their political patrons, apart from liberally financ-&lt;br /&gt;ing these campaigns. How can a politician, after he gains power with the help of a&lt;br /&gt;criminal, ever let down the criminal? This symbiosis of politicians and criminals&lt;br /&gt;which has emerged from the extant Indian political system is the root cause of all&lt;br /&gt;the complications discussed until now.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The very fact that politicians are prepared to risk their reputations rather than&lt;br /&gt;distance themselves from the crime world, shows how highly the world of crime is&lt;br /&gt;regarded by the politicians in their scheme of things. Politics and crime have&lt;br /&gt;become the two faces of the same coin in the present state of affairs and a saying&lt;br /&gt;goes that there cannot be politics without crime and no crime without politics. In&lt;br /&gt;the present Indian situation, it is true that the lotus of politics can blossom only in&lt;br /&gt;the offal of crime.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Importance of violence&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The need for organised violence is so high on the priorities of the Indian politics&lt;br /&gt;that all political parties have created youth and volunteer wings to accommodate&lt;br /&gt;young hoodlums as a fighting and street-smart force to further the interests of the&lt;br /&gt;political party in street-fights and gang wars. Those who stand out among the&lt;br /&gt;recruits to these wings for their exemplary courage and toughness are provided with&lt;br /&gt;fast promotional avenues to reach the top and the fact that a very high percentage&lt;br /&gt;of ministers in Indian Governments are the fighters from this arena gives a glisk to&lt;br /&gt;the high priority of violence and crime in the present Indian political setup.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Criminalisation of police&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It is an irony that politicians, whose patronage criminals sought to ease them&lt;br /&gt;from the straints of the police, brought the latter closer to each other, building a&lt;br /&gt;bridge between them. The understanding reached between criminals and the police&lt;br /&gt;goes a long way in criminalising Indian public life and blunting the effectiveness&lt;br /&gt;of the policing. Though the nexus between criminals and the police is not a new&lt;br /&gt;phenomenon, that what was an exception once has become a rule now and what&lt;br /&gt;was a rule once has become an exception. The criminals overawed the weak police&lt;br /&gt;with their connections with powerful politicians on one hand and lured the police&lt;br /&gt;with easy money and comfort on the other and thus tilted the balance to their&lt;br /&gt;advantage from the mouse and cat disadvantage they once suffered not long ago.&lt;br /&gt;Though criminals played their political cards with adroitness, their real target a tout&lt;br /&gt;propos was easing themselves from the pressures of the police. This, they achieved&lt;br /&gt;with little cost by deftly flaunting their political connections to a weak and&lt;br /&gt;crumbling police. Criminals did business with officious police for huge grists to&lt;br /&gt;their coffers of professional interests without giving away anything substantial in&lt;br /&gt;return, save trifling throw aways. This itself, however, was an unimaginable&lt;br /&gt;bonanza to the lowly police of all ranks who had never seen life with open eyes&lt;br /&gt;outside their regimens.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Crime and Indian politics&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If some are born criminals, some choose the path consciously and some others&lt;br /&gt;are constrained to follow the path. While faulty financial and social policies forged&lt;br /&gt;by unenlightened politicians are responsible for forcing several helpless people to&lt;br /&gt;the path of criminality on the one hand, their opportunistic, politically-motivated&lt;br /&gt;demarche more often drives sensitive people on the path of revolt to inclip the fold&lt;br /&gt;of terrorism and violence. Naxalism, Sikh terrorism, the ULFA movement, Kash-&lt;br /&gt;mir separatism, Hindu and Muslim militancy and even sympathy in India for the&lt;br /&gt;LTIE cause are direct outcomes of the nonchalant political handling of the national&lt;br /&gt;issues.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;India has seen isolated political attempts in the past. to lure people out of the&lt;br /&gt;clutches of the crime world and rehabilitate them; these, however form exceptions.&lt;br /&gt;The famous Chambal experiment initiated by the late Sri. Jayaprakash Narayan had&lt;br /&gt;some success in spite of discordant vibes raised by the machinations of certain&lt;br /&gt;politicians in the area.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Political kidnapping&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Political kidnapping is an international phenomenon that comminated the world&lt;br /&gt;of diplomacy in excelsis in the 1970's. The menace trickled onto the Indian scene&lt;br /&gt;though slowly, decisively in the 1980's. The realisation that political ends can be&lt;br /&gt;easily met by the malengine of the kidnap-drama opened up an aboideau to the&lt;br /&gt;terrorists who were acharne to meet per saltum their political telos. The increase&lt;br /&gt;in terrorist activities in India, perchance, as an outcome of the suspected" balkanisa-&lt;br /&gt;tion of India" policy adopted by some foreign countries, made political kidnapping&lt;br /&gt;an ubiquitous reality on the Indian political scene from the latter half of the 1980s.&lt;br /&gt;The terrorists of Kashmir and Punjab set the tone in India which was picked up by&lt;br /&gt;the People's War Group and the ULFAs in the 1990s. The inexperience of Indian&lt;br /&gt;political leaders in tackling the problem complicated the matter. While most&lt;br /&gt;countries around the world explicated a policy of stubborn refusal to yield to&lt;br /&gt;kidnappers' demands under straints a tout prix the Indian leaders goofed by&lt;br /&gt;displaying their weaknesses while people close to them were abducted, in yielding&lt;br /&gt;to demands as a quid pro quo in releasing a large number of dangerous terrorists&lt;br /&gt;who were arrested at huge cost and loss of lives. The situation has been further&lt;br /&gt;complicated by adopting a policy of double standards in sacrificing the lives of&lt;br /&gt;lesser mortals in some other cases. It is obviously sending a mauvais depeche to the&lt;br /&gt;would-be terrorists that the closer the proximity of the kidnapped to a political&lt;br /&gt;leader, the bigger is the chance of meeting their political ends.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The reclame attached to the kidnap-drama and the arousal of the public interest&lt;br /&gt;in the developments that follow is another dimension of the political kidnapping&lt;br /&gt;that brings an identification and gives an image to a terrorist outfit as nothing else&lt;br /&gt;can. It has become the fashion to initiate a terrorist outfit with a kidnapping&lt;br /&gt;operation. This chevisance in the inchoate drama proves the strength and resource-&lt;br /&gt;fulness of the new outfit and its locus standi among such other outfits, in the way&lt;br /&gt;that the murders committed by a recruit decides his place in the Mafia. The finesse&lt;br /&gt;displayed in executing the operation to a successful end decides the future of the&lt;br /&gt;organisation apart from the advantages of the ransom money and release of&lt;br /&gt;compatriots. Interestingly, the first experiment of political kidnapping in the Indian&lt;br /&gt;scene was conducted in a foreign country in the form of the egregious abduction&lt;br /&gt;and killing of Mr. R.H. Mhatre, a junior diplomat in the Birmingham consulate in&lt;br /&gt;the first week of February, 1984 by JKLF militants.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Political kidnapping and murder is tout court the most heinous crime that often&lt;br /&gt;involves the cold-blooded murder of absolutely innocent people for political ends.&lt;br /&gt;The mental agony and postliminary destruction involved to the maledict hostages&lt;br /&gt;and their near and dear ones because of the misguided entrainement of a handful&lt;br /&gt;of greenhorns naturally make kidnapping an infructuous political tool at the end.&lt;br /&gt;The considerable fall in the incidences of political kidnapping on the international scene of late is an indication of the increasing realisation of this fact. Crime scarcely&lt;br /&gt;survives in the situations of haute politique like diplomacy and relations between&lt;br /&gt;nations. High thinking by enlightened people functions as a catchpole to check the&lt;br /&gt;criminal tendencies from being perpetuated. Political kidnapping on the Indian&lt;br /&gt;scene is also bound to be a temporal phenomenon as seen other where in the world.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A disturbing trend in political kidnapping is the possibility of professional&lt;br /&gt;criminals like smugglers and drug pedlars resorting to political kidnappings at the&lt;br /&gt;hest of their illegal profession in the guise of political kidnappers. The accrescent&lt;br /&gt;dependence of terrorists and professional criminals on each adds to the complexity.&lt;br /&gt;This unhealthy situation is already true in India as it is in many other countries, a&lt;br /&gt;pernicious cohabitation that's a zotic commination to peaceful international order.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;. The kidnapping of Romanian charge d' affaires in India, Liviu Radu on October&lt;br /&gt;9, 1991 on his way to office by the Sikh militants is the first instance of a high&lt;br /&gt;ranking foreign national of diplomatic corps being kidnapped by Indian militants&lt;br /&gt;to meet domestic political goals. This succeeded, a series of similar kidnappings of&lt;br /&gt;Indian and foreign officials by the People's War Group, the ULFA and the Kashmir&lt;br /&gt;militants. The abduction of Mr. K-Doraiswamy, an aine director of the Indian Oil&lt;br /&gt;Corporation by the JKLF militants and his postliminary release in exchange for&lt;br /&gt;nine arrested Kashmir militants hit headlines in Indian newspapers by the reason&lt;br /&gt;of the 'Stockholm syndrome' noticed in the hostage after his release. His empathy&lt;br /&gt;with his captors and their cause and sympathetic references to Azad Kashmir,&lt;br /&gt;liberation struggle, misguided boys etc. after his release rather than a degout to them&lt;br /&gt;were explained in the language of the cooperative behaviour se defendendo of the&lt;br /&gt;pusillanimous hostages of a bank robbery in Stockholm in 1973, and is indited in&lt;br /&gt;psychology texts as "Stockholm syndrome". The tendency of a diffident hostage to&lt;br /&gt;cooperate sans gene as the only dernier ressort and even aid his captors at the&lt;br /&gt;damnurn of seity may well-nigh turn out to be a malengine in the hands of&lt;br /&gt;resourceful criminals to force a change in political attitude in the symbiotic world&lt;br /&gt;of the criminals and politicians. The salutary references of Mr. K. Doraiswamy to&lt;br /&gt;his captors au serieux also throw light on the possibility of his being conducted&lt;br /&gt;maestoso, non obstante his otherwhere political affiliations, ipso facto suggesting&lt;br /&gt;that political criminals more than often are gens de bien of high principles and a&lt;br /&gt;selfless goal to achieve. It is why these criminals come under a distinct class and&lt;br /&gt;command furibund aficionado from specific sections of the society, it be Subha and&lt;br /&gt;Sivarasan of the LTTE or Sukhadev Singh (Sukha) and Harjinder Singh Jinda of&lt;br /&gt;the Sikh militants.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Operation Rhino against the ULFA activists is a direct offshoot of a series&lt;br /&gt;of kidnappings of Indian and foreign nationals and killing of some of them by the&lt;br /&gt;ULFA militants in Assam. The People's War Group in Andhra Pradesh is going&lt;br /&gt;progressively active in kidnapping government officials to bring the state govern-&lt;br /&gt;ment on its knees. The government of Andhra Pradesh is yet to take the gauntlet by the horns. The kidnap dramas excoriate criminals, politicians and the police to a&lt;br /&gt;war of nerves and those who have steel nerves in them emerge successful in the&lt;br /&gt;end. The political kidnappings are further complicating the welter created in the&lt;br /&gt;Indian and international mise en scene by the rise of kidnappings for ransom sine&lt;br /&gt;compe scere by misadventurous individuals or groups lucri causa. The sema of&lt;br /&gt;kidnappings becoming the piece de resistance of organised crime as a means of&lt;br /&gt;making a fast buck is already evident on the Indian scene as more and more reports&lt;br /&gt;of businessmen, industrialists or their relatives and children being kidnapped for&lt;br /&gt;ransom appear in newspapers in Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Assam, Punjab, Delhi,&lt;br /&gt;Calcutta, Bombay and even smaller places. Ascensive anfractuosity of egregious&lt;br /&gt;mafia gangs in these operations is a pollent possibility. The relevance of the police&lt;br /&gt;comes into the picture in their ingine to check these pernicious developments. The&lt;br /&gt;triste reality is that the Indian Police has failed to rise to the occasion till now.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Police as a link&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It can be categorically said that the business of crime cannot survive anywhere&lt;br /&gt;if politicians and the police join hands to bring the crime world to heel as is expected&lt;br /&gt;of them. Alas, it is not to be in a world of opportunist politicians and muticous,&lt;br /&gt;weak police, both with an eye on the spoils of the crime world. The police, actually,&lt;br /&gt;is the weak link in the troika of power-brokers. It is just a significant link between&lt;br /&gt;the major players of the drama, namely politicians and criminals, and functions as&lt;br /&gt;an instrument of politicians to bring criminals to their grip and to tighten the prise.&lt;br /&gt;The role of the police as a law-enforcing agency and its consequential hold on&lt;br /&gt;criminals makes it a handy instrument for politicians.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Politicisation of police&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The police is imprimis an executioner and odd job boy of the government. This&lt;br /&gt;image of police is effectively made use by politicians for all conceivable personal&lt;br /&gt;and official purposes. While low-ranking police are put to use as body guards,&lt;br /&gt;gunmen, messengers, watchmen and odd-job attenders, high-ranking police are put&lt;br /&gt;to the travails of the same odd jobs in higher forms. It is a triste commentary on&lt;br /&gt;the present police that while low-ranking police do the job as an unavoidable duty,&lt;br /&gt;high-ranking officers compete and fight among themselves to get and attend to the&lt;br /&gt;odd jobs of their political masters. This they do, even while they are fully aware&lt;br /&gt;of the criminal antecedents and police histories of some of their benefactors. Where&lt;br /&gt;is the passion of our police for law and justice, the fighting spirit against crime and&lt;br /&gt;lawlessness that should be the cardinal professional emotions at all levels? It is just&lt;br /&gt;that our police has no more commitment to justice and social cause and nothing&lt;br /&gt;seems worth the effort, save career promotions and creature comforts.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Not that the police force is devised to be the personal handmaid of the&lt;br /&gt;politicians. It is to be the ultimate power-bearer, the moving force of power on the&lt;br /&gt;field. This necessitates discretion and exemplary personal dignity to be its primary&lt;br /&gt;traits. It has to be a cornucopia of strength of caractere and probity and stand up&lt;br /&gt;as a model to less fortunate people of the country. This beau ideal is also relegated&lt;br /&gt;to oblivion in current Indian policing where all-out self-promotion by devious&lt;br /&gt;methods is the norm.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;    Subservience in police&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The present police, particularly at higher levels, condescends to any mean level,&lt;br /&gt;even at the cost of personal pride, human decency, individual dignity, social&lt;br /&gt;standing and professional ethics, just to get a pat from its political masters. There&lt;br /&gt;are instances wherein police officers of higher rank exposed their careers and lives&lt;br /&gt;to deadly risks by pursuing deviant methods to please politicians. The mishandling&lt;br /&gt;of the Bangalore bandh on December 13,1991 wherein violence was let to spread&lt;br /&gt;and intensify till it went out of control in the evening is a point in issue. These facts&lt;br /&gt;only make out apoint that a normal man, once he enters the police service, somehow&lt;br /&gt;unconsciously assumes to role-play the canine nature and gives a go-by to human&lt;br /&gt;instincts, conscience and such noble traits which are exclusive to the human animal.&lt;br /&gt;The question is should the police be so? Is it imperative to shed human qualities&lt;br /&gt;and assume canine instincts to join the police service? Is it true that policing can&lt;br /&gt;be effective only with the canine instinct of blind loyalty and instinctive obedience,&lt;br /&gt;deprived of all individuality, conscience and rational judgement? The answer is a&lt;br /&gt;categorical 'no'. On the other hand, policing can be genuine policing only with the&lt;br /&gt;strength of character, tempered with rational judgement and healthy exchange of&lt;br /&gt;ideas at all levels.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Voice of reason is silenced&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It is not as if all people who join the police are always weaklings. Saner elements&lt;br /&gt;made up of stronger fibre too once in a way enter the police. However, numerically&lt;br /&gt;superior leeway swimmers with their stronger positions, by courtesy of officious&lt;br /&gt;politicians, strangle the reasonable voice of the enlightened few who enter the&lt;br /&gt;service. If some among such a minority are found to be implacable and refuse to&lt;br /&gt;be illaqueated, they are easily crippled by murky malengines that bring mayhem&lt;br /&gt;on their career prospects. The police displays an extraordinary unity of purpose in&lt;br /&gt;executing the telos of eliminating the common enemy of its personal ends, though,&lt;br /&gt;otherwise, it is as polarised as any conteck-ridden organisation. Career-long&lt;br /&gt;enemies become friends and most inefficient officials become thorough profes-&lt;br /&gt;sionals in fulfilling this task. Most of the righteous few yield to the straint and fall in line with the majority pursuits. This success has made the police think that its&lt;br /&gt;weapon is inviolable, though foul and dangerously wrongful. However, sadly, it&lt;br /&gt;has forgotten that all are not the same and that there are exceptions for everything.&lt;br /&gt;It is quite possible that none of such unethical methods affect the few exceptionally&lt;br /&gt;strong-willed, noble individuals, but obsign their resolution not to yield to the&lt;br /&gt;pravity and fight out a tout prix. I know at least one bright senior officer, still in&lt;br /&gt;service in the Kamataka police, who bore all such humiliations valiantly and refused&lt;br /&gt;to give away even an inch from where he stands jusqu au bout with stately grandeur&lt;br /&gt;even at the cost of his promotion.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Casualty of individuality&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A police official who commits his time to the services of his favoured politician&lt;br /&gt;is aware of his weak position that it may embarrass him when the concerned&lt;br /&gt;politician loses his power. This consciousness sensitises him to the need of garner-&lt;br /&gt;ing support from all around, including subordinates, colleagues and seniors. Any&lt;br /&gt;source of plain speaking among subordinates is taken with serious apprehension&lt;br /&gt;and everything possible, either legal or illegal, is plotted to keep such a source in&lt;br /&gt;place. It is ruthlessly hit in its most sensitive parts to bring it to its senses. This&lt;br /&gt;approach has led to a myriad number of casualties: really bright, outstanding,&lt;br /&gt;conscientious and four-square officers who inadvertently joined the police. Either&lt;br /&gt;they are made to blunt their sensitivities and calibre to adapt to the ground reality&lt;br /&gt;or pack-up right away. The travails of ploughing the field for a fresh approach is&lt;br /&gt;not only not allowed, but even the thought of such experimentation is roughed up.&lt;br /&gt;Is the police department doomed to be the cold-storage of musty, old skeletons&lt;br /&gt;without room for resilience? Those who reached the top with the support of&lt;br /&gt;opportunistic politicians think so.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A political instrument&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In an atmosphere where placements and transfers are decided by the needs and&lt;br /&gt;wishes of self-seeking politicians, no police can efficiently function nor can it be&lt;br /&gt;free from the vice prise of the politicians. It is not surprising that power-esurient&lt;br /&gt;politicians more and more grab powers that are legally and traditionally invested&lt;br /&gt;with the police department when the top brass lack the strength of character and&lt;br /&gt;conviction. This leads to a position wherein the police department becomes a&lt;br /&gt;chessboard on which politicians move their pieces to checkmate their adversaries&lt;br /&gt;and win the political game in their favour. In other words, the police sans effective&lt;br /&gt;leadership is becoming more a handmaid of politicians by moving away from its&lt;br /&gt;sacred role as the guardian of law and justice and protector of the society and the&lt;br /&gt;common man. The credit of bringing the police from its height of power to the present level of absolute submission should go to the superior strength of per-&lt;br /&gt;sonality of wily politicians who bent the police on their own terms with selective&lt;br /&gt;use of stick and carrot. This police is not the police and what it does is not policing&lt;br /&gt;in the proud sense of the term.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Changed role&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;With the increscent involution of the p »lice with glidder politicians, the con-&lt;br /&gt;ception of the police about its own role has undergone a large-scale change. No&lt;br /&gt;more does it look at crime control and maintenance of order as its first duty. With&lt;br /&gt;this, the concern for crime control received a setback and crime control and&lt;br /&gt;investigation have receded to the last priority except when politicians are interested&lt;br /&gt;in them for a specific purpose. Only crimes that disturb politicians foment police&lt;br /&gt;to galvanic and meaningful action. Other crimes receive no priority. The very&lt;br /&gt;definition of the gravity of crime is adapted to suit the new conception. Those&lt;br /&gt;crimes which are tolerated by politicians are no more crimes. The self-image of&lt;br /&gt;the police as 'a fearless arbiter of crime' is changed to a solicious servant in&lt;br /&gt;attendance at the pleasure of a politician master. This blunting of the crime card&lt;br /&gt;of the police has made it less awe-inspiring and less deserving of respect from the&lt;br /&gt;criminals. The police has more and more realised that criminals, particularly those&lt;br /&gt;from organised syndicates are personal friends of its political masters and it is no&lt;br /&gt;match for the criminals in terms of wealth, influence and social standing. The men&lt;br /&gt;of the police see those criminals on equal footing with their political masters and&lt;br /&gt;learn to treat them with awe. They find it absurd to act with authority against the&lt;br /&gt;immarcescible criminals who are too high for the small stature of the police. It is&lt;br /&gt;unfortunate that the police of the present day has never realised its infinite stature&lt;br /&gt;as a law-enforcing agent vis a vis all others including criminals and politicians&lt;br /&gt;whom it is empowered to search, arrest and take to court if they deviate from their&lt;br /&gt;rightful path. Sadly, the trifling wealth and the concomitant "big-man" image of&lt;br /&gt;others appears to the present police as more appealing than its own awful police&lt;br /&gt;authority.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Reversal of functions&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The very possibility that policemen trade off their awful authority lucri causa&lt;br /&gt;is an astounding phenomenon. Undoubtedly, the poor salaries and inadequate&lt;br /&gt;working conditions have brought about this sad state of affairs. The hafthas and&lt;br /&gt;such periodical shares of the spoils from criminal activities often are the mainstay&lt;br /&gt;of the well-being of many police families. This triste glissade has unfortunately&lt;br /&gt;permeated even to the highest levels in the police as reported in a shameful case&lt;br /&gt;from Karnataka sometime back in 1990 wherein a IPS man and his wife on the day of the former's retirement were taken to the court of law by the public on the&lt;br /&gt;complaint of defrauding the public by selling tickets in the name of a spastic society&lt;br /&gt;charity show and collecting money eo nomine. The event made big news with bold&lt;br /&gt;| headlines splashed across newspapers at the time. That apart, the importance of&lt;br /&gt;various police jobs is determined in police circles on the basis of the potential of&lt;br /&gt;the posts for attracting illegal money from the crime world. And jobs with potential&lt;br /&gt;for such gains are most sought after and the concours for such jobs is so high that&lt;br /&gt;often postings to such jobs are bought by paying money in lakhs. Indeed, the&lt;br /&gt;investment is made with the esperance of making it back several times over within&lt;br /&gt;a short period thereafter in synergy with the crime world. It is the reason why law&lt;br /&gt;and order posts, traffic policing, postings in the food enforcement cell and even&lt;br /&gt;certain vigilance jobs outside the police as in the KEB for instance are known as&lt;br /&gt;jobs to be earned by beating out cut-throat competition while many other jobs are&lt;br /&gt;known to be punishment postings and are largely detested. It goes without saying&lt;br /&gt;that judging jobs on the basis of the gauntlets they provide or on the opportunity of&lt;br /&gt;service is now a matter of yore. It is the crime world with the wealth it appropriates&lt;br /&gt;to each job that decides the importance or otherwise of the police jobs and ipso&lt;br /&gt;facto controls the type and calibre of officers in each job. In other words, it is the&lt;br /&gt;criminals who invisibly control the police ab extra rather than the police controlling&lt;br /&gt;the criminals. This reversal of functions has lots to do with the low morale of the&lt;br /&gt;present Indian police. Its members find themselves at the mercy of criminals whom&lt;br /&gt;they are supposed to trammel and bring to book. The police is no morg confident&lt;br /&gt;that it is mentally and organisationally equipped to treat criminals in malam partem.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Weakened police&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The increasingly powerful and modernised crime syndicates vis a vis the age-old&lt;br /&gt;police force have made crime control a misnomer in the Indian context. The&lt;br /&gt;decreasing percentage of the police presence due to its failure to keep pace with the&lt;br /&gt;population growth in the face of the increasing crime density, the disadvantage of&lt;br /&gt;the police in re the speed of communication, transportation and weaponry before&lt;br /&gt;the ultra-modern machines of the crime world, the advantage of criminals in terms&lt;br /&gt;of the choice of time and place of operation and concomitant superior numerical&lt;br /&gt;strength and ability to produce surprises and the highly skilled and motivated cadres&lt;br /&gt;of the criminal world pressing down a demoralised and indifferent police give&lt;br /&gt;criminals an edge over the police in their encounters. Consequently, police&lt;br /&gt;fatalities in such encounters are increasing. This holds good for terrorist groups,&lt;br /&gt;too. Ergo, the police in India is no longer keen to actively interfere with the activities&lt;br /&gt;of the crime world. The understanding between the criminals and police is that&lt;br /&gt;both confine themselves to their respective fields and avoid embarrassing each&lt;br /&gt;other. The police is duly paid for its silence while stray troublemakers who jump in medias res are silenced. The Indian police is sane enough to quickly realise that&lt;br /&gt;its interests are safe in silence while an uncalled-for tangling with the crime world&lt;br /&gt;may invite a host of complications and comminate individual job security and lives.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Police leadership&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The albatross of the atrophy of the present Indian police solely rests on the&lt;br /&gt;incompetent police leadership of independent India rather than on anything else.&lt;br /&gt;Unimaginative organisational planning, uninspiring operational guidance and con-&lt;br /&gt;trol and lack of leadership conviction in modem police leaders has led to utter chaos,&lt;br /&gt;resulting in a random chorisis of the organisation without any conceivable planning&lt;br /&gt;or application of mind to the needs of effective supervision and control&lt;br /&gt;mechanisms; dangerously ineffective recruitment, ineffective training, misuse of&lt;br /&gt;the facilities of confidential assessment of subordinates and the degeneration of&lt;br /&gt;control and supervision machinery are symptomatic organisational maladies. The&lt;br /&gt;present Indian police force is utterly demotivated from its professional objectives&lt;br /&gt;and police jobs are considered only as devices that provide rank, power, social&lt;br /&gt;status, sundry comforts and a comfortable job to fall upon when an urge to work&lt;br /&gt;arises. How can the people of India depend upon a police force of this sorry state&lt;br /&gt;of affairs for their security, protection and orderly living?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Organisational growth&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;How deeply the police is self-centred even within its own organisation and what&lt;br /&gt;care and concern the police leaders show to evolve a perficient and planned police&lt;br /&gt;organisation can be assessed by the trend of evolution of the police organisation as&lt;br /&gt;an increscently top-heavy setup and the speed with which promotions are affected&lt;br /&gt;at different levels. In states where there were only two officers of the rank of&lt;br /&gt;Inspector General of Police, for say forty thousand men and officers about ten years&lt;br /&gt;back, there are now nearly twenty officers of and above the rank of Inspector&lt;br /&gt;General of Police, for say fifty thousand men and officers: thereby the last ten years&lt;br /&gt;account for 25% expansion in the lower levels against 1000% expansion at higher&lt;br /&gt;levels. What these people at the top do for policing apart from being a drain on the&lt;br /&gt;state revenue and a strain to officers down the levels with conflicting instructions&lt;br /&gt;of dubious merit? Almost nothing. It is unfortunate that none in the police&lt;br /&gt;administration realises that it is not the rank, but the real human stuff inside that&lt;br /&gt;decides the height, excellence, merit, intelligence, honesty, integrity, respon-&lt;br /&gt;sibility, work knowledge and human qualities of a person. Promotion to higher rank&lt;br /&gt;serves no purpose unless the higher rank provides a really higher agd challenging&lt;br /&gt;job content and a suitable man is perforce selected to meet the increased challen-&lt;br /&gt;ges.This is not the case in present police promotions where sinecures are created to facilitate promotions to satisfy in-group instincts. Most of these jobs are without&lt;br /&gt;any job content and responsibility and often are places to relax from the pressures&lt;br /&gt;of family life. However, the same courtesy does not extend to the more unfortunate&lt;br /&gt;ranks at lower levels including the constabulary. While vacancies at the topmost&lt;br /&gt;level are filled up by promotions strictly overnight, promotions at intermediary&lt;br /&gt;levels are effected in weeks or fortnights or months, depending on the rank in the&lt;br /&gt;police hierarchy. It is years in the case of the constabulary. There are cases where&lt;br /&gt;vancancies of Head Constables and Assistant Sub-Inspectors or Sub-Inspectors are&lt;br /&gt;not filled up for several years, depriving the constabulary of their de jure promo-&lt;br /&gt;tions. There are any number of instances of men in the constabulary, retiring&lt;br /&gt;without a promotion non obstante their eligibility and seniority for the existing&lt;br /&gt;vacancies, which are not filled up from many years. Policing is a job, performed&lt;br /&gt;mostly at lower levels with decreasing involvement upto the level of Superintendent&lt;br /&gt;of Police. Beyond that, it is tout court a supervisory task and in a police force with&lt;br /&gt;no supervision to speak of, higher ranks are just de trop. Any move to expand these&lt;br /&gt;ranks and any undue haste to promote to these levels cannot be called honest&lt;br /&gt;decisions in the functional or public interest. Unfortunately, the Indian police is&lt;br /&gt;doing just that and there is none to put it back on the right track.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Management of human resources&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The position is worse in recruitment. Selection has become a misnomer. It is&lt;br /&gt;random at best and high business at its worst. This approach to recruitment may&lt;br /&gt;turn out to be a highly dangerous situation for both the governance and public life&lt;br /&gt;of India. Policing is a highly sensitive profession and requires only specially&lt;br /&gt;equipped people to handle it. It demands certain specific traits in its officers which&lt;br /&gt;cannot be learnt by any amount of training. The police being the ultimate power-&lt;br /&gt;bearer on the street, the public look to it as a a model and its mien decides public&lt;br /&gt;trust in the government In the circumstances, the wrong selection to the police is&lt;br /&gt;bound to be fatal to the national life. India is deeply mired in such a dangerous&lt;br /&gt;situation now. There is a price fixed for each rank of the police. How can a fresh&lt;br /&gt;recruit who enters service by paying a bribe be expected not to reap returns from&lt;br /&gt;his large investment? What can be his mental picture of the service he enters? It is&lt;br /&gt;absurd to expect professional policing from such a recruit. Those who permit such&lt;br /&gt;nasty doings in the police or involve themselves to bring the organisation to its&lt;br /&gt;painfully slow sphacelus are the butchers of a great tradition.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Even when there is genuine scope for proper selection in recruitment, nothing&lt;br /&gt;is done to rope in the really competent. It is either because none bother much to&lt;br /&gt;have a really competent person in the slot or because of the incompetence of the&lt;br /&gt;persons entrusted with the job Of selection. The common aim of the police in&lt;br /&gt;recruitment now is to complete the job without inviting legal hurdles at the best.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Sometimes, even rules are overstepped to cut short procedures and do away with&lt;br /&gt;cumbersome work. Even sensitive posts at the lowest level like police drivers are&lt;br /&gt;filled up arbitrarily and quality suffers as a result. This is equally so in matters of&lt;br /&gt;transfers as discussed in detail elsewhere.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Line of command&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Everything is not right in the spine of the police organisation namely the&lt;br /&gt;hierarchical order - itself. The importance of honesty, integrity, hard work and&lt;br /&gt;excellence is replaced with personal loyalty and usefulness for personal odd jobs.&lt;br /&gt;This is the outcome of the natural devolution of personal loyalty to politicians at&lt;br /&gt;higher levels on the ladder. Those who do not come up to the expectations of&lt;br /&gt;personal loyalty, fall out of favour and are eliminated from the line of command as&lt;br /&gt;persona non grata. This pravity has a more demoralising effect in a force of line&lt;br /&gt;of command than meets the eye. This trait in the organisation results in the&lt;br /&gt;deflection of brighter, proud and four-square officers to insignificant jobs to the&lt;br /&gt;advantage of the opportunistic ones who are insecure and ergo tend to make up&lt;br /&gt;their famishment with personal loyalty to those in power. It is the main contributing&lt;br /&gt;factor for the slow degeneration of the present Indian police.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Quality is suppressed&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;There are some unwanted under currents in the Indian police that make pride,&lt;br /&gt;efficiency, excellence, originality and such superior qualities the objects of fear and&lt;br /&gt;hatred. Perhaps, these superior qualities do not go pari passu with the line of&lt;br /&gt;command by the reason of the insecure feelings, these superior qualities rouse&lt;br /&gt;higher in the line. The fear is not based on reality in a disciplined force like police&lt;br /&gt;where the line of command functions a tout propos without reference to personal&lt;br /&gt;traits. The question is why this fear surfaces in the modem police while the&lt;br /&gt;pre-independent police with all its better manpower could run without it. The&lt;br /&gt;possible answer is that the line of command is a perfect mechanism in a disciplined&lt;br /&gt;force when the force indulges in dejure professional duties. However, the line of&lt;br /&gt;command becomes increasingly strained when it is used for personal ends as of&lt;br /&gt;late. Ergo, ultimately, it is a vicious circle wherein poor leadership leads to&lt;br /&gt;elimination of quality and that in turn results in poorer leadership which slowly&lt;br /&gt;blights the police organisation to its triste logical end.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Police brotherhood&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The police is a sacred confrerie of those who choose policing as their profession.&lt;br /&gt;It is here, as brothers irrespective of caste, creed, social standing, rank or personal&lt;br /&gt;traits, they live as one, in the interests of the common objective of crime control&lt;br /&gt;and maintenance of law and order. How can this ideal which was once a strikingly&lt;br /&gt;kenspeckle reality survive in changed circumstances where there is no common&lt;br /&gt;cause except personal advancement at the cost of everything? Consequently,&lt;br /&gt;groupism is abounding in the police force and jealousy has become a characteristic&lt;br /&gt;feature of the ranks. There is no mutual warmth among police personnel. The&lt;br /&gt;police force, once a smooth silk fabric, is now in shreds with each group pulling on&lt;br /&gt;opposite sides to the detriment of the unity, essential to its survival in view of the&lt;br /&gt;natural job hazards. Indifference to the other's predicament is a rule in the police&lt;br /&gt;these days. Often, those in the police contribute to each other's misfortune because&lt;br /&gt;of accidental bad blood or just fun. No confrerie is patent anywhere in the present&lt;br /&gt;Indian police.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Lack of planning&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The police, by the nature of its jobs, is required to walk hand in hand with&lt;br /&gt;modem advancements to keep itself fit and functionally effective. The general&lt;br /&gt;reluctance of the Indian police to adapt to new ideas and the ungainly handling of&lt;br /&gt;modernisation projects have resulted in its falling en wrier in terms of modem&lt;br /&gt;machines and organisational techniques in comparison to the syndicates of or-&lt;br /&gt;ganised crime which keep themselves pan passu with neoteric findings and&lt;br /&gt;inventions to keep themselves in excelsis of the effectiveness. En attendant,&lt;br /&gt;modem communication, information, transport, office and armament gadgets are&lt;br /&gt;bought for the police on the advice of some sales agents without creating the&lt;br /&gt;adequate infrastructure or trained personnel for their use and without assessing the&lt;br /&gt;real need of such equipments in the existing police situation. As a result, the gadgets.&lt;br /&gt;so bought, fall apart with desuetude after the initial entrainement cools down. Such&lt;br /&gt;a light-hearted approach to modernisation results in the police becoming more and&lt;br /&gt;more an obsolete unit, apart from putting an unproductive burden on the state&lt;br /&gt;exchequer.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The police is one of the most vital instruments of the public administration and&lt;br /&gt;works as a link between the executive arm and judiciary. It is the ears, eyes and&lt;br /&gt;limbs of the government. No government with a failing police system can survive&lt;br /&gt;whatever be its other assets. It is against this background that the glitches bedevill-&lt;br /&gt;ing the present Indian police should be viewed. Any complacency at this stage&lt;br /&gt;about the existing police system may prove too costly for the unity and well-being&lt;br /&gt;of the country and the health of its governance.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Professional policing&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The police of India imprimis, should be extricated from the clutches of criminals&lt;br /&gt;and politicians to make it a professional policing outfit with objectivity and&lt;br /&gt;commitment to its task as the cardinal gospel. Both criminals and politicians have&lt;br /&gt;stakes in the style of functioning of the police and neither of them, the criminals&lt;br /&gt;with their easy money and the politicians with their easy power, let the police slip&lt;br /&gt;from their grip. There is no point in beginning the cleansing operation from the&lt;br /&gt;sides of the criminals or politicians. It has to begin from the side of the police by&lt;br /&gt;insulating it from the vile influences of criminal wealth and political power. If this&lt;br /&gt;bifarious object is fulfilled, all others fall into place by themselves. Once the vile&lt;br /&gt;shadows of the criminals and politicians are removed from the face of the police,&lt;br /&gt;it is certain to resile to its old professional self - a highly committed, motivated and&lt;br /&gt;efficient force. But the golden question is how to achieve this end and save the&lt;br /&gt;police from these two debilitating influences.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Independent police&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In a free society like India with a democratic political system in the saddle,&lt;br /&gt;interaction between various strata of society is a natural phenomenon and efforts&lt;br /&gt;to raise barriers between blocks is bound to be infructuous. Yet the gauntlet of&lt;br /&gt;saving the police from dangerous influences should be courageously taken up in&lt;br /&gt;the national interest. The fact of the police being a disciplined force is both an&lt;br /&gt;advantage and disadvantage in this stupendous challenge. It is an advantage because&lt;br /&gt;the weapon of discipline, if discreetly employed, can be used to block the police&lt;br /&gt;from undue interaction with unwanted elements. It is a disadvantage because the&lt;br /&gt;police with its trained response may find it difficult to isolate itself from the personal&lt;br /&gt;behests of its political masters. It is left to police leaders to devise appropriate&lt;br /&gt;techniques to make the best use of the existing advantages in this sacred and&lt;br /&gt;patriotic task. To begin with, somebody among the police leaders should decide to&lt;br /&gt;bell the cat. Who can do that while all of them are willing partners in creating the&lt;br /&gt;vested nexus that helps them to ascend to their present high positions in the&lt;br /&gt;hierarchy? Yet, the world is not as bad it is painted. There have to be exceptions&lt;br /&gt;for everything and thus, good people among the police too, who by the quirks of&lt;br /&gt;dextro tempore avoid the long arms of Satan and survive to reach the place where&lt;br /&gt;they rightfully belong. These breaches in the otherwise swarth layers of clouds&lt;br /&gt;throw rays of hope upon the future of Indian police.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Police authority&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The first and foremost job to be done is to free the police from the unhealthy&lt;br /&gt;influence of all hues of politicians by making it responsible to an independent&lt;br /&gt;authority with absolute power to take decisions on matters pertaining to policing&lt;br /&gt;and police organisation. The authority should be a professional body with men of&lt;br /&gt;proven probity and quality as members, who have reached a stage from where they&lt;br /&gt;need not sacrifice their convictions to appease those in power. A working arran-&lt;br /&gt;gement is to be devised by which the authority is responsible directly to the&lt;br /&gt;legislature and functions as an independent authority like the judiciary, Comptroller&lt;br /&gt;and Auditor General or Election Commissioner.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Core group&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The damage already done to the police by the ancien regime can be undone by&lt;br /&gt;overhauling the recruitment procedure and investing utmost care to ensure that&lt;br /&gt;really the best from the job seekers are let in to the service. Any interference in&lt;br /&gt;matters of recruitment should be promptly and decisively resisted. To make&lt;br /&gt;recruitment an efficient operation, only highly qualified officers of proven probity&lt;br /&gt;should be entrusted with the task with the absolute authority to take decisions within&lt;br /&gt;the framework of law. The ugly head of bribery in recruitment should be ruthlessly&lt;br /&gt;crushed and the unhealthy tendency of making recruitment a business should be&lt;br /&gt;curbed tout a fait. Infusion of good blood at least at this late hour is certain to undo&lt;br /&gt;the damage done till now and bring the ancien regime yet extant inside to its senses.&lt;br /&gt;Indeed, the recruitment should be followed with a sound training that sensitises the&lt;br /&gt;recruits to their professional ethics and motivates them to their sacred duties and&lt;br /&gt;responsibilities.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Contented police personnel&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Police jobs should be made attractive with good salaries and satisfactory&lt;br /&gt;working conditions that give the strength to resist the bait thrown by the criminals.&lt;br /&gt;It is proved by social scientists that the incidence of bribery is inversely proportional&lt;br /&gt;to the financial strength of a social group. Therefore, better salaries and eximious&lt;br /&gt;working conditions definitely make the police less sensitive to these lures. This&lt;br /&gt;would be a major step in prising the hold of criminals over the police. The measure&lt;br /&gt;must be closely followed by a perficient and strictly professional policy of place-&lt;br /&gt;ments to ensure the right man comes to the right job with merit and honesty being&lt;br /&gt;duly rewarded. Measures to ensure an unbiased assessment of the work and&lt;br /&gt;character of subordinates strengthen and place the police organisation on sound footing. Those who are empowered to assess subordinates and their work must be&lt;br /&gt;made answerable therefore and any unscrupulous and random discharge of their&lt;br /&gt;duties should condemn them forever for the misuse of this sacred responsibility to&lt;br /&gt;the future of the organisation.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Fair play&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Creation of a high power core group of people who are adept in assessing men&lt;br /&gt;and character within the aforesaid police authority may help to create a feeling of&lt;br /&gt;confidence and job security and prod them into discharging their official duties&lt;br /&gt;fearlessly. This group which oversees the work of police personnel from a distance&lt;br /&gt;should be made ultimately responsible for all career decisions. The responsibility&lt;br /&gt;of officers in assessing the work of their subordinates which forms the major&lt;br /&gt;embarrassment of the present Indian police must be limited to giving their opinion&lt;br /&gt;about performance to the core group; the expert core group processes the opinion&lt;br /&gt;by its own research, expertise and discretion and takes responsible decisions on its&lt;br /&gt;own. The group must be made responsible for development planning of the police,&lt;br /&gt;work assessment, job analysis, recruitment and management of human resources.&lt;br /&gt;Institution of such a core group to oversee the career development of police&lt;br /&gt;personnel without personal bias may bring revolutionary changes by committing&lt;br /&gt;the police to its work ethics and professional ends with due single-mindedness.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Mental quality&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It is a tragedy in the current Indian police that there is no relation between the&lt;br /&gt;efficiency and performance of an official and his standing in the organisation. The&lt;br /&gt;police officials are so indifferent to the performance of their subordinates and their&lt;br /&gt;work turnout that they are absolutely in the dark about the standard of work turned&lt;br /&gt;out under their supervision. Another reason for this sad affair may be that they are&lt;br /&gt;unqualified to assess. This situation leads to random assessment when a senior is&lt;br /&gt;statutorily bound to assess and in the process, talent withers and opportunists&lt;br /&gt;overtake high-calibre workers on the hierarchical ladder. This tragic melange can&lt;br /&gt;be brought to order by exposing police officers periodically to motivation courses&lt;br /&gt;where they are taught about the work they are required to perform, its importance&lt;br /&gt;and how to discharge their duties. There is an innate trait in the police that makes&lt;br /&gt;people entering it shut their minds and distance themselves from all hues of mental&lt;br /&gt;activities. Police training must endeavour to break this trait and coax trainees to&lt;br /&gt;open their minds and reflect on all matters before making decisions. Often, the&lt;br /&gt;habit of reading becomes a casualty, once a person enters the police. The police is&lt;br /&gt;in no way antipodean to mental and scholastic pursuits. It is a mystery what there&lt;br /&gt;is in the police that binds its men to let their minds and hearts languish by desuetude. Police researchers must look to this matter to mould the police into an organisation&lt;br /&gt;which acts and thinks before resorting to action. Before this happens, police&lt;br /&gt;training has a major role to make a recruit a thinking animal with a heart to feel and&lt;br /&gt;an intelligent instinct to follow.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Professional knowledge&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This negative approach to reading and thinking has resulted in poor professional&lt;br /&gt;knowledge in the police, particularly at the higher ranks. Work knowledge is&lt;br /&gt;generally limited to what is remembered from previous work experience and bits&lt;br /&gt;of what is learnt from books during police training, decades before. Their defective&lt;br /&gt;conception about supervision compounds the situation by depriving them of the&lt;br /&gt;benefit of learning new things during supervision of work. The style of supervision&lt;br /&gt;in the police should be seen to be believed. All orders to subordinates emanate&lt;br /&gt;from a perfect void. The orders warrant subordinates to feed them what is to be&lt;br /&gt;done in a given situation and the reply received is returned to the same subordinate&lt;br /&gt;as an order to perform. The best style of supervision in the police is no more than&lt;br /&gt;holding a meeting of subordinates wherein the latter are allowed to arrive at a course&lt;br /&gt;of action to meet a given challenge, and the decision is returned to them as an order&lt;br /&gt;to perform. This style of ineffective supervision must stop if quality is required in&lt;br /&gt;police work. The system of overlapping supervision because of multiple ranks,&lt;br /&gt;where none really discharges his supervisory role must be scrapped to make the&lt;br /&gt;police a meaningful organisation. A thorough overhauling of police training&lt;br /&gt;programmes and application of modem organisation techniques to bring in effective&lt;br /&gt;check and control mechanisms would go a long way in ameliorating the ground&lt;br /&gt;realities in the police.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Universality of crime&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;On ultimate analysis, crime is a universal phenomenon. All living beings are&lt;br /&gt;criminals in varying degree. Criminal thought is a part of the natural function of a&lt;br /&gt;healthy mind as is the moral restraint that prevents the criminal thought from being&lt;br /&gt;acted upon. External restraints brought about by the fear of law, custom and adverse&lt;br /&gt;reaction reinforce the inner restraint to prevent the committing of crime. However,&lt;br /&gt;as the force of external restraints weakens for diverse reasons and the proportion&lt;br /&gt;of gain to be made in committing a crime overweighs the risks involved in the&lt;br /&gt;balance sheet of the operation, the lure of crime increases and the deed is done. It&lt;br /&gt;is the social situation which controls the external restraints to make committing a&lt;br /&gt;crime an asset or a liability and thereby decides the proliferation or suppression of&lt;br /&gt;crime with human nature being what it is always. Criminals are criminals because&lt;br /&gt;society gives them easy openings to thus meet their needs. Politicians love to befriend criminals rather than bring them to book because the society they live in&lt;br /&gt;makes their lives comfortable with criminals as friends rather than as adversaries.&lt;br /&gt;Policemen find the crime world sweeter because it is how things stand for them.&lt;br /&gt;The remedy for the proliferation and endearment of crime lies in changing the social&lt;br /&gt;dynamics to make crime a liability to criminals and criminals a liability to&lt;br /&gt;politicians and the police. In the existing nexus of politics, crime and police, crime&lt;br /&gt;is an asset to criminals and criminals are an asset to politicians and police.&lt;br /&gt;Criminals should not be construed as a separate block of citizenry. They are a&lt;br /&gt;cross-section of people from all fields of life who have moved beyond a commonly&lt;br /&gt;accepted degree in their criminal tendencies. Criminality may be prolific in certain&lt;br /&gt;civilised fields like commerce and industry in the form of tax evasion, violation of&lt;br /&gt;foreign exchange regulations, hoarding etc; such crimes are generally not taken&lt;br /&gt;seriously in spite of the public awareness of the crimes, with the social standing of&lt;br /&gt;the criminals remaining unaffected. Government servants too come under this&lt;br /&gt;category of criminals because of the unconfined corruption in public life. It is a&lt;br /&gt;fact that Indian public life is a vast field of criminal activities and politicians and&lt;br /&gt;police, though the custodians and protectors of the Indian public life, form part of&lt;br /&gt;the crime world. However, knowledge of the involvement of politicians and police&lt;br /&gt;in this nasty world stirs the public conscience, for the reason that they are supposed&lt;br /&gt;to be the people on whom the public relies to save them. But, it cannot be because&lt;br /&gt;they are also part of the society which makes public life a nasty affair and nourishes&lt;br /&gt;it.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Crime and national economy&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A word about the effect of the nasty nexus between politics, crime and police&lt;br /&gt;on the national economy. Unity gives strength. It is true about the nasty nexus&lt;br /&gt;also. The only telos of the nexus is gain by synergy, the synergy which brings&lt;br /&gt;confidence and courage to the troika in its nefarious activities, thereby inducing it&lt;br /&gt;to more daring and innovative criminal activities. This results in proliferation of&lt;br /&gt;crime, apart from affecting the quality of crime by opening up new avenues for&lt;br /&gt;operation. As the ultimate end of all crime is illegal gain and the incidence of crime&lt;br /&gt;is directly related to increase in black money in the national economy, the prolifera-&lt;br /&gt;tion of crime invariable results in inflation and the weakening of the national&lt;br /&gt;economy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;More dangerously, it results in a polarisation of the society into criminal rich&lt;br /&gt;and honest poor and destroys the country's moral fabric. The increscent incidence&lt;br /&gt;of easy money, material comforts and political power of the criminal rich ultimately&lt;br /&gt;leads to internal strife, emeute and popular terrorism.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Social polarization&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The indulgence of the rich and powerful in crime popularises criminal activities&lt;br /&gt;by bringing an aura of status to them and negating all inhibitions in the popular&lt;br /&gt;mind. Society easily accepts the example of the wealthy and powerful for making&lt;br /&gt;an easy buck to lead comfortable lives in the world where life is becoming&lt;br /&gt;increasingly difficult because of the spurt in black money, caused by the prolifera-&lt;br /&gt;tion of crime. While decent life becomes impossible by honest methods, the need&lt;br /&gt;of survival forces honest citizenry to accept crime as a way of life as the last resort.&lt;br /&gt;This would be where politicians, criminals and police lead the country.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Easy money and easy wealth have a tendency to inflate. Criminals tend to spend&lt;br /&gt;lavishly. This ends up in a spurt in prices of land, building and essential com-&lt;br /&gt;modities while honest men have to toil hard for an extra quarter. Crime begets&lt;br /&gt;money and money begets more money and more money begets power, comfort and&lt;br /&gt;everything. In the crush, honest man is lost forever. The ocean of criminal wealth&lt;br /&gt;around him which is beyond even his wildest dreams frustrates him and ravages his&lt;br /&gt;sense of morality and righteousness. It turns him violently against all human values&lt;br /&gt;and decency, leading him to a world of crime and violence. It is what we see in&lt;br /&gt;Punjab, Kashmir, Assam, in far away Srilanka or even in Naxalism where it is&lt;br /&gt;hidden in the guise of political ideology. It is an irony that politicians and the police,&lt;br /&gt;who create the demons, eat their own pies by falling to the bullets of the grievously&lt;br /&gt;hurt, self-righteous, once innocent people. It is said that even the dacoits in&lt;br /&gt;Chambal are symptomatic of this social and economic malady.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It is true that crime cannot be eliminated from any society as the tendency to&lt;br /&gt;commit crime is ingenerate in human nature. However, crime can be supressed by&lt;br /&gt;appropriate straints. What straints and how they are to be applied are ironically&lt;br /&gt;decided by politicians and the police. If they come out of their indulgent interests&lt;br /&gt;to commit themselves to their professional objectives, they can certainly save India&lt;br /&gt;from the present predicament. Not that every politician and every policeman can&lt;br /&gt;come out to achieve this noble task, but there certainly are noble elements yet&lt;br /&gt;surviving as exceptions among them, who should take up cudgels in favour of the&lt;br /&gt;Indian polity and sacrifice their lives and careers, if necessary, to make the&lt;br /&gt;renaissance of Indian police and Indian public life possible. The question yet to be&lt;br /&gt;posed is whether the inveterate vested interests will let these sacrifices bear fruit.&lt;br /&gt;Let us hope for the best.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;CENTER&gt;&lt;A HREF=http://members.rediff.com/pra8veen/praveen.htm&gt;BACK &lt;/A&gt;&lt;/CENTER&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;!-- BEGIN LINKEXCHANGE CODE --&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;center&gt;&lt;iframe src="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1674099/showiframe?" width=468 height=60 marginwidth=0 marginheight=0 hspace=0 vspace=0 frameborder=0 scrolling=no&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1674099/clickle" target="_top"&gt;&lt;img width=468 height=60 border=0 ismap alt="" src="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1674099/showle?"&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1674099/clicklogo" target="_top"&gt;&lt;img src="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1674099/showlogo?" width=468 height=16 border=0 ismap alt=""&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/center&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;!-- END LINKEXCHANGE CODE --&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;!-- BEGIN LINKEXCHANGE CODE --&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;center&gt;&lt;iframe src="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1675533/showiframe?" width=468 height=60 marginwidth=0 marginheight=0 hspace=0 vspace=0 frameborder=0 scrolling=no&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1675533/clickle" target="_top"&gt;&lt;img width=468 height=60 border=0 ismap alt="" src="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1675533/showle?"&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1675533/clicklogo" target="_top"&gt;&lt;img src="http://leader.linkexchange.com/X1675533/showlogo?" width=468 height=16 border=0 ismap alt=""&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/center&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;!-- END LINKEXCHANGE CODE --&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/3842343-82678607?l=police1.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/3842343/posts/default/82678607'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/3842343/posts/default/82678607'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://police1.blogspot.com/2002_10_06_archive.html#82678607' title=''/><author><name>praveen</name><uri>http://www.blogger.com/profile/16356536646210674851</uri><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author></entry></feed>
