Deccan Chronicle

TS cops on a clean-up drive

No need to collect money anymore: Officials

-

The state police has taken up the task of cleaning the department of personnel who are indulging in corruption or promoting unethical practices. The exercise, according to senior police officials, is being taken up to improve the image of the police.

To begin with, the heads of districts and commission­erates across the state are identifyin­g police personnel of the rank of assistant sub-inspector and below to ranks who have been posted at the same police station or office for long.

“After identifyin­g them, we are doing a background check. If the reports of such personnel are adverse they are being attached to the district headquarte­rs. This is being done to check corrupt practices at the police stations levels,” said Nalgonda superinten­dent of police A.V. Ranganath.

The Nalgonda police has so far identified and transferre­d about 50 of its personnel. “Such exercises will be routine hereafter to eradicate corruption at all levels,” he added.

Similar exercises has been taken up in the Khammam commission­erate by commission­er Tafseer Iqbal; the official has so far attached around 50 policemen to the headquarte­rs.

Such an exercise was carried out in Hyderabad when Director-General of Police M. Mahendar Reddy was the commission­er of police. Around 100 policemen were attached to the city police headquarte­rs then.

The police stations have a head constable or constable who are called, in police parlance, “collectors” or “road masters”. This is an age-old practice and the proceeds reach senior officers of a certain rank.

Usually the ‘collector’ takes a monthly ‘mamool’ from wine shops, bars, toddy compounds, scrap yards, hotels, road side push and eateries and pan shops, sources said.

The government is now paying for administra­tive expenses — `75,000 for those in the city, `50,000 for those in the district headquarte­rs and `25,000 for small police stations in rural areas — and there is no need to collect money, an officer said. Cyberabad crime cell nabbed a B.Tech dropout on Thursday from Hyderabad for fraudulent­ly transferri­ng `3.9 lakh from his roommate’s account.

K. Srinivas, inspector of Cyber Crime cell, Cyberabad has identified the accused as Nangunoori Nikhil Sai, 21, from Kamareddy. He was staying in KPHB with Pankaj Kumar, 21, the complainan­t in a hostel at KPHB.

“The accused installed a UPI-enabled payment applicatio­n on the victim’s phone in March and without his knowledge, would use it to transfer funds into his account. He deleted all text messages which further made the complainan­t oblivious to the fraud. The accused had fraudulent­ly transferre­d `3.9 lakh to his own account between from March 26 and May 14,” said the official.

The complainan­t who is undergoing software training, lodged a complaint on May 21 at the KPHB police station.

He had two bank accounts linked to his UPI applicatio­n installed by the accused.

The official informed that the accused had committed this fraud for the first time. The accused confessed to his crime and has been sent to judicial remand.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India