Hindustan Times (Delhi)

PUNJAB TO REVIEW ALL LICENCES AS PART OF GUN CONTROL

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH: Punjab on Sunday banned songs promoting gun culture, public display of weapons and ordered a thorough review of all existing arms licences in the state within the next three months, according to an official government order. The order came days after the killings of a local leader and a Dera Sacha Sauda follower.

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab government on Sunday banned songs promoting gun culture, public display of weapons and ordered a thorough review of all existing arms licenses in the state within the next three months, according to an official order.

The order, issued by the state home department to the director general of police, police commission­ers, deputy commission­ers and senior superinten­dents of police, came amid criticism over alleged deteriorat­ing law and order in the state after Shiv Sena (Taksali) leader Sudhir Suri and Dera Sacha Sauda follower Pardeep Singh were killed in a week this month.

“If any license has been found to be issued to any ineligible person, then it should be canceled immediatel­y. A complete ban should be imposed on songs eulogizing guns and violence. Complete ban on public display of weapons, including on social media,” the directive, seen by HT, said.

On May 12, chief minister Bhagwant Mann condemned the trend of gun culture and gangsteris­m being “promoted” by some singers, warning that those found involved will be dealt with sternly.

The prohibited carrying and displaying of weapons at public events, social gatherings and religious ceremonies.

The department also ordered a thorough review of all existing arms licenses within the next three months and said any license found to be issued to an ineligible person should be revoked immediatel­y.

Gun licenses are granted following a detailed formal applicatio­n, depending on the license seek’s requiremen­t and threat perception. Applicants often cite crop protection, family heirloom, security threat and financial dealsuri ings as reasons for applying for the same. Character verificati­on, medical and dope tests are conducted on license seekers as part of the applicatio­n process.

The directives also included tightening of procedures for issuance of fresh arms licenses and random checking to curb illegal possession of guns. No new license will be issued unless the concerned authority is convinced about the grounds for the same, the order said.

Besides these, the government also called for registrati­on of a police case against those who indulge in hate speech against any community.

(58) was protesting outside Gopal Mandir on Majithia Road — one of the busiest places in Amritsar — when the main accused, Sandeep Singh (31), shot him on November 4. The incident took place in the presence of a police team, including an assistant police commission­er. Singh was arrested on the spot.

Pardeep Singh, an accused in the 2015 Bargari sacrilege case in Faridkot, was shot dead inside his shop in Faridkot’s Kotkapura on November 10. Punjab Police said six people were involved in the killing. Delhi Police’s special cell nabbed three suspects, including two juveniles, from Patiala district on Friday.

Punjab, hit by terrorism in the 1980s and 1990s, has approximat­ely 400,000 arms license holders, including those of prohibited bore and non-prohibited bore, and most of these were issued during the militancy period, according to people familiar with the matter.

Leader of Opposition Partap Singh Bajwa said any steps taken by the state government to improve law and order or to safeguard the interests of the citizens are welcome. “They (government) have to be very careful while reviewing the existing gun licenses so as not to disarm people who need the weapons for their safety. “There is an urgent need to crackdown on illegal weapons in the state but the government appears to be groping in the dark,” he said.

Cultural commentato­r and professor of history Harjeshwar Pal said: “In my opinion, this is just a very shallow and easy option for the government. The basic work of any government in a liberal democracy is to maintain law and order as well as to respect individual liberties. Our government­s have failed to do both. Instead of the hard option of taking political responsibi­lity and police accountabi­lity, they have made the singers the scapegoats.”

THE ORDER CAME AMID CRITICISMS OVER THE KILLING OF TWO PEOPLE IN A SPAN OF ONE WEEK THIS MONTH

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India