Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

The buck stops with Adityanath

The inspector’s killing points towards an institutio­nal crisis

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Improving law and order was one of the key poll planks of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in its campaign for the 2017 assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh. It swept the elections, but on the law and order front, things never really improved despite a spate of encounter-killings. Now, they have reached a nadir with a mob killing an on-duty police inspector in Bulandshah­r district on December 3, 2018.

The sequence of events suggests premeditat­ed design to create trouble. Cow carcasses were found in an isolated area. A mob gathered in no time in the name of demanding action against alleged killers. It went to a police post, indulged in rioting and arson, and killed two people including inspector Subodh Kumar Singh. While a probe has been announced and one should wait for its findings, the state needs to answer some questions. It has been clear for some time that there are organised groups in the state which are always looking to create trouble, even unleash lethal violence in the garb of protecting cows. Does the police and the intelligen­ce machinery have any idea about their activities? If yes, what has been done to take pre-emptive action against them? The illegality of cow-slaughter notwithsta­nding, the issue has often been used to create communal polarisati­on. A local Bajrang Dal leader has been named as one of the accused in the Bulandshah­r violence. Shouldn’t the political arm of the state and those seen close to it try and defeat this tactic rather than encourage it by using such rhetoric themselves?

Last but not the least, is the issue of the preparedne­ss of the police force in Uttar Pradesh. In retrospect, it is clear that the police party of which Singh was a part was overwhelme­d by the mob. Why was adequate force not deployed in time to prevent this situation? That this is the same police force which has faced a lot of flak over many dodgy encounters, including that of a business executive in Lucknow, shows that it has been erring on both sides: applying unnecessar­y force where it is not required, and failing to defend itself when under attack. Does this not point towards a deeper institutio­nal crisis within the Uttar Pradesh police? Ensuring that the killers in the Bulandshah­r incident are brought to book is the responsibi­lity of the state’s criminal justice system. As for the larger questions discussed above are concerned, the buck stops with none other than Yogi Adityanath, who heads the executive in Uttar Pradesh.

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