Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Hire Iitians, MCA grads as cyber police’

- Azaan Javaid azaan.javaid@hindustant­imes.com

INDIA’S POLICE ARE DUE FOR REFORMS THAT CAN HELP THEM TACKLE GROWING WORK PRESSURE AND CRIPPLING STAFF SHORTAGE

NEW DELHI: Graduates from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) colleges or those who have a Master of Computer Applicatio­ns (MCA) degree should be recruited as cyber crime investigat­ors, India’s top policy-making body Niti Aayog suggested as part of measures to overhaul India’s police.

The “Building Smart Police: Background into the needed Police Reforms” report called for a new approach to “specialise­d crimes”, suggesting recruitmen­t of people with expertise in roles that typical constables or sub-inspectors cannot handle.

It calls for legislativ­e and judicial changes that will help police across t he country streamline their operations, focussing on core functions to maintain law and order.

India’s police are long due for sweeping reforms that can help them tackle growing work pressure and crippling staff shortage, often blamed for rising crime.

The recruitmen­t of techies as cyber crime investigat­ors is among ways the new approach could work.

IIT or MCA graduates can be hired as sub-inspectors or inspectors in state crime investi- gation department­s to better tackle the “highly complex nature” of such cases, the report said. “To prevent detection, they should work in plain clothes”.

IITS are India’s marquee engineerin­g colleges, famous for their rigorous entrance procedure and lofty pay packages for graduates.

Similar to cyber crime, social crimes can be tackled by people recruited from background­s such as social sciences or social work. “Social crimes like offences related to beggary, prostituti­on, crimes against women, domestic violence, dowry offences, etc cannot be handled by the traditiona­l daroga. Experts suggest that it needs to be handled by a separate wing with people like students who have graduated in Social Science/social Work,” the report reads. Excise, forest, transport and food department­s should set up their own enforcemen­t wings in order to free the state police, who normally help such officials.

“5th Report of the Second Administra­tive Reforms Commission further suggests that functions like serving court summons, antecedent­s and addresses verificati­on for passport applicatio­ns or job verificati­ons etc can be outsourced to private agents or government department­s. These measures will help in reducing the workload of the police,” the report adds.

The Administra­tive Reforms Commission (ARC) is a central government committee that gives recommenda­tions for reviewing the public administra­tion system. The Second ARC was set up in 2005.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India