Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

The police aren’t a private army

The thriving nexus between IPS officers and netas is unhealthy

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The recent infighting in the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion, involving its seniormost officers, and the ongoing tussle between the investigat­ing agency and the West Bengal government over Kolkata police commission­er Rajeev Kumar’s conduct in the Saradha probe, have thrown up an unsettling fact: The close associatio­n that many

Indian Police Service (IPS) officers (there are honourable exceptions) have with their political masters. In an article in The Statesman, Sankar Sen, former director, National Police Academy, unveiled the depth of the crisis facing the force: “[The police] functions as the police of the ruling party, and not the people’s police. Upright officers, with spine, are asked to cool their heels in inconseque­ntial postings .... Politicisa­tion has snapped the chain of command and control, corroded discipline, and made the police leaders beholden to the politician­s of the ruling party.” Given the state of affairs, it’s hardly a surprise that many officers are also in the dock on corruption charges.

While no one is denying that there has to be a basic level of trust between political leaders and top police personnel, the latter is duty-bound to not cross the line. The All India Services (Conduct Rules), 1968, has clear guidelines for officers. It says that each member of the service must maintain integrity, devotion to duty, high ethical standards and political neutrality, among other things. By flouting these rules, officers are not only failing to discharge their constituti­onal responsibi­lities and devaluing the force, they are also sending out wrong signals to the constabula­ry. The police cannot be allowed to behave like private armies of the political class.

In the past few years, there has been talk of the urgent need for police reforms to insulate the force from external pressures, and also implement the core recommenda­tions of the National Police Commission (1978-81). Decades have gone by, but almost all the states, through various strategies and subterfuge­s, have evaded implementa­tion of the instructio­ns. However, the real reforms — of character and ethics — has to start from the civil servants themselves. Blaming the political class for the state of affairs won’t do; their ethics have to be unimpeacha­ble.

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