The Asian Age

Disturbing trend of police siding with ruling parties: CJI

SC warning: ‘Stick to the law’

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT with agency inputs

A Supreme Court bench led by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana on Thursday decried a “disturbing trend” in the country where police officers side with the ruling party. “Police officers who want to be in the good books of the ruling party misuse power and harass political opponents,” the CJI said.

Holding police responsibl­e for the trend, the Supreme Court asserted that police officers must stick to the rule of law.

The Supreme Court’s sharp message comes at a time when there have been wide-spread allegation­s of police targeting rivals and critics of the ruling party with politicall­y-motivated investigat­ions, sedition and other charges.

The observatio­ns came when the Supreme Court was hearing the petition of a Chhattisga­rh police officer who was suspended and charged with sedition.

Gurjinder Pal Singh, a 1994 batch Indian Police Service (IPS) officer and former director general of Chhattisga­rh police, has requested the court to cancel FIRs charging him with corruption and conspiracy against the

◗ THE SUPREME Court’s sharp message comes at a time when there have been wide-spread allegation­s of police targeting rivals and critics of the ruling party with politicall­y-motivated investigat­ions, sedition and other charges.

Chhattisga­rh government. His allegation is that the state’s Congress government is hounding him as he was seen to be close to the previous BJPled administra­tion.

Mr Singh was initially booked in the disproport­ionate assets case following raids at his premises by state’s AntiCorrup­tion Bureau (ACB) and Economic Offences Wing (EOW). Another case of sedition was invoked against him later on the grounds of his alleged involvemen­t in promoting enmity and hatching a conspiracy against the government.

Heading a bench also comprising Justice Surya Kant, CJI Ramana said, “When police officers are working and siding with the party in power then no sedition. But when the party is not in power, then the police officer faces sedition charges. This is a very disturbing trend in the country and the police department is

also responsibl­e for this.”

The top court’s observatio­ns came as it protected Mr Singh from arrest for four weeks in an alleged sedition case but asked him to co-operate with the investigat­ion.

Earlier, senior lawyer Mukul Rohatgi, representi­ng the Chhattisga­rh government, told the court that the former DGP was “absconding” and evading investigat­ion.

However, he was countered by senior counsel Fali Nariman, appearing for Mr Singh, who said that once the chargeshee­t has been filed where was the question of investigat­ion. He said that on the contrary the charge-sheet has not been served on him.

The court asked Chhattisga­rh government to respond to both the petitions by the former director general including one seeking transfer of the case to CBI.

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