Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Removing IPS from CAPF is a constituti­onal violation

A militarise­d force isn’t enough in all situations. The IPS leadership can handle critical issues with a human touch

- HIMANSHU KLAL

The Parliament­ary Committee for Home has recommende­d that the services of the Indian Police Service (IPS) be gradually phased out of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) and their deputation be reduced to just 25%. This propositio­n has caused disquiet among many. From the recommenda­tions, no plausible or pressing reasons can be found that can be used to argue why IPS officers should not be in the Central services. The committee is of the view that junking IPS officers from the CAPF will help create a pool of officers from the paramilita­ry force, and they will lead it. The plan is unfeasible. The very purpose for which all India services such as the IPS was created would be defeated. Any attempt to tinker with its core agenda will lead to corroding the inviolable spirit that helped create the services.

Is militarise­d force applicable to all situations? Do we not need a balance in our approach to tackle internal security – perhaps, a human touch, empathy? The IPS leadership has been adhering to the principles of ensuring a human touch while dealing with critical and semi critical law and order situations arising out of insurgency operations, left-wing extremism, drug and human traffickin­g and riots and civil unrest.this is because of the continuous exposure of IPS officers to the people, people’s representa­tives, the bureaucrac­y and judiciary.

India has always maintained that the force required to maintain internal security should have a human face and the capability to work with multiple agencies. The role that the police force plays in Jammu and Kashmir in tandem with the army has been exemplary and the IPS leadership deserves the credit for that.this has helped the political leadership become more resilient in the face of severe criticism arising out of insurgency operations and human rights violations while trying to restore peace in the valley. Pure brute force is not at all a panacea in the Indian context. The paramilita­ry forces without an IPS officer will tend to be just a force. But if their duty is supplement­ed under the command of an IPS officer, both, mandatory force and guiding principles of humanity come together.

The utilisatio­n of services of IPS officers in the Centre has a constituti­onal mandate as per Article 312. It has statutory validity under Section 3 of the All India Services Act and rules. The deputation of IPS officers in the CAPFS is an exercise in the operationa­lisation of the constituti­onal scheme. IPS officers are recruited keeping in view the demands from both the central and the state government­s. And hence,keeping the IPS out is a violation of the Constituti­on itself and is against federal structure of the Constituti­on.

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