Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Cops on the “chopping block”

- By B. Anton Jeyanathan

The police service has been severely criticized on a regular basis for the omissions and commission­s of senior and junior officers. With the budget proposal the insinuatio­ns and the mudslingin­g, mostly against traffic policemen, have been uncharitab­le. It has been claimed in newspaper articles, cartoons and interviews with members of the public, that the amount of bribes to be given to policemen will have to be more because of the increase in traffic fines.

I do not for a moment claim that no criticism should be made against policemen. Policemen are also human beings and like in all other organizati­ons and societies there are the good and the bad. Let us accept that the percentage of the good in any society, any organizati­on and the police, outnumber the percentage of the bad. It is the policeman who is the panacea of all ills of society be it family or land disputes, abductions, elopements, barking of neighbours’ dogs, traffic jams and what not, faced by society; all conceivabl­e criminal offences which are reported to the police and which the public expect them to solve. It is the policeman who is at the center of everything and every problem society is confronted with from birth to death,

Bribery

Bribery is not confined only to policemen. Unfortunat­ely, because of direct interactio­n with members of the public, the policeman is seen by the public as the only one who takes bribes in the entire country. I am not trying to be the “devil’s advocate” to whitewash or exonerate the policeman of his act of accepting bribes in different forms, mostly by way of accepting cash. I do not condone bribery amongst policemen but condemn it unreserved­ly. However, I would like the members of the public to look around at practicall­y every government department, especially those department­s which are responsibl­e for earning revenue for the government – let it be the Immigratio­n Department, National Identity Card Department, Registrar of Motor Vehicles Department, Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages, the Customs Department, the Land Registry, hospitals, court houses, I can go on and on about the department­s where there is rampant bribery and corruption. We are aware of the recent detection made by the Bribery Department where it was alleged that millions of rupees were accepted by officers of a revenue earning department to clear containers. Let there be no misunderst­anding that I am not advocating that the Police Department too should be corrupt like the other department­s, but severe punishment should be meted out to those detected accepting bribes.

Who corrupts?

It is we citizens who corrupt the police in order to escape or prevent a police officer from taking legal action against us for offences committed by us against the laws of the land. It is we who corrupt and then howl that policemen are bribe takers. We too are equally guilty for offering bribes to policemen. I would like to quote from the Bribery Act of 31 December 1985 Sect.19. Section 19 (a) describes this law thus:

“A person who offers any gratificat­ion to a public servant as an inducement or a reward for that public servant’s performing or abstaining from performing any official act, or expediting, delaying, hindering or preventing the performanc­e of any official act whether by that public servant or by any other public servant, or assisting, favouring, hindering or delaying any person in the transactio­n of any business with the Government, shall be guilty of an offence punishable with rigorous imprisonme­nt for a term of not more than seven years and a fine not exceeding five thousand rupees.”

Traffic

Recently with the increase of fines for traffic offences some citizens and some press items, cartoons etc., have made degrading remarks about the police claiming that the bribes to be given to police officers will be more than before. We are all paragons of virtue, and police officers are devils incarnate. The so called gentlemen drivers dislike being stopped by a policeman and they never admit their faults but drop the name of a high ranking police officer or politician to intimidate the policeman who stopped them, to get out of the awkward situation. Recently it was reported that the wife of a politician had been stopped by a policeman and had abused the policeman for stopping her vehicle where she was only a passenger and the policeman had to release her and the vehicle without taking any action against the driver. In this case I blame the policeman for having let the driver go free and for releasing the vehicle without charging the driver for the offence he had committed. The other category of drivers are those who are prepared with the necessary amount of money in their driving licence book and are ready to hand over the licence book with the money to escape Court action. Are they not guilty of offering a bribe having violat- trishaws which clog the city plying to and fro violating all traffic rules. The government has to seriously consider curtailing the import of vehicles, cars, trishaws and motor cycles. The government should also consider implementi­ng a plan restrictin­g the number of vehicles coming into the city on working days by devising a method of restrictin­g motor vehicles with certain numbers entering the city on restricted days, and curtailing the entry of trishaws to the city limits especially during the day. In bygone days policemen planned out their duties and deployed more men during “peak hours” in the morning and in the evening, but alas the police cannot deploy more men as the entire 24 hours have become “peak hours” today. Besides the government, there are other stakeholde­rs like the Road Developmen­t Authority (RDA), municipali­ty, Transport Ministry, traffic engineers etc., who have to take the blame for the mess and the traffic congestion in the city. Flyovers are being built haphazardl­y just to overcome congestion at a particular junction or point. The government must review these projects and have flyovers built on longer stretches of road so that the traffic flow will be smoother from one point leading towards the city.

Mega police

The government has establishe­d a ministry to build a mega city in the city of Colombo. It is hoped that whatever plans they have, priority should be given to build more flyovers so that the traffic congestion in the city will not cause frustratio­n amongst the drivers and travelers who are at times caught up in traffic jams without any movement for more than half an hour or so thereby increasing the anger and blood pressure of drivers and travelers. Look sympatheti­cally at the traffic policeman when you drive around the city and watch him moving like a robot waving his arms and blowing the whistle, and you will see the same face in the morning as well as in the evening. Do not offer bribes to a police officer if you are detected for any traffic offence. Accept your guilt and accept the fine the officer imposes or go to courts and settle the matter there. Cheer him up with a smile in appreciati­on of his hazardous duties, whenever you pass a traffic cop.

Policemen too are human beings; they have their own problems, families, aspiration­s and limited stamina and patience. The majority of policemen are from villages and may even be your kith and kin. I like to repeat a famous ballad by the late M.S. Fernando who was known as the baila chakravart­hi – and praised the policeman for his unstinted service to members of the public. “Ralahamy mang Policiya, Ralahamy mang. Saamaya araksha karana niladhariy­a mang. Vahana anathuru baluwama apamanai. Evata hethuwa nosalakill­a thamai. Mahamaga yana ena aeyin obata karadarai. Obey arakshavat­a sitinne mama thamai.” Just to touch on the traffic, he says ‘The rate of traffic accidents is enormous. The reason for this is negligence”. This ballad was sung about 40 years ago or so. Just imagine what he would have sung if he had seen the traffic mess at present.

Do not drink and drive, do not violate the traffic laws.

 ??  ?? The insinuatio­ns and mudslingin­g against traffic policemen have been uncharitab­le.
The insinuatio­ns and mudslingin­g against traffic policemen have been uncharitab­le.

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