The Police as a law unto themselves
Posted: Thu Apr 21, 2016 3:57 pm
A friend sent me the following well written article discussing the Police Commissioner system, as adopted by most big cities in India. This system has always (conceptually) bothered me, as it hands over magisterial powers to the police, thus reducing accountability. Removing these crucial checks and balances has time and again led to situations where our law enforcers have become a law unto themselves.
There is a good reason why the idiom "judge, jury & executioner" has such a negative connotation and immediately brings to mind images of a stifling, despotic regime.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/analysis/ ... TsVPL.html
There is a good reason why the idiom "judge, jury & executioner" has such a negative connotation and immediately brings to mind images of a stifling, despotic regime.
Why is this posted under the RKBA section? Because in jurisdictions where this system is in force, the Police are given the (otherwise) Magisterial power to issue Arms Licenses (in all other jurisdictions it is the District Magistrate/ DC). Also, it seems that wherever the Commissioner system has been implemented, fewer percentage of Arms Licenses are issued.William Congreve wrote:But in this Court, what Diff'rence does appear!
For every one's both Judge and Jury here;
Nay, and what's worse, an Executioner.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/analysis/ ... TsVPL.html
The police should not be a law unto themselves
Ashok Kapur | Updated: Apr 20, 2016 18:44 IST
When the just-retired Delhi commissioner of police was asked about violence against women, his reported response was: If the law allowed ‘us’, he would order all rapists to be shot dead! Such a mindset strikes at the root of good governance and the rule of law. All the exhortations to the civil service about good governance and service are meaningless if the enforcement arm of the state is virtually without any control or accountability.
However, it is not his fault. It is the ‘system’ that breeds such attitudes. If public servants vested with power and armed with the latest weaponry are not accountable to an external authority, they can get away with murder. In the case of a police force, it can do so literally. This, precisely, is the persistent malaise in Delhi’s police force — authority without accountability.
The canker cannot be correctly diagnosed and treated unless one delves into the history of the police commissioner ‘system’. All credit to the British, who first introduced the rule of law in India, with the enactment of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC) in 1860. Arguably, it is the finest criminal code in the democratic world today. It was a piece of exquisite workmanship on the part of Thomas Babington Macaulay, who was also the author of the educational minutes of 1835.
Under the code, the police force was given limited authority and was fully accountable to the civilian magistracy. A magistrate was put in charge of the administration in the countryside. The magistrate, as the head, was the cornerstone of the majestic edifice of the Roman Empire under ‘rule of law’. And ‘law’ was defined as a ‘speaking magistrate’. It was the birth of democracy.
The British in India, however, made an exception and placed a ‘top cop’ in the three metropolitan cities in the country — Bombay, Calcutta and Madras — because there were Europeans in these cities. They worked out an arrangement — the police commissioner system. But very limited magisterial powers were given to the police.
For several decades the police commissioners were civil servants who continue to be, even today, trained and experienced magistrates. It is only later that men in uniform were appointed, more to accommodate delisted soldiers after the war than on merit. The civilian magistrate as police commissioner was the embodiment of the basic principle of modern democratic governance — civilian control of the armed services of the State.
Today, the principle is being twisted out of shape. More and more cities are being brought under the commissioner ‘system’, pursuant to a Supreme Court judgment on ‘police reforms’. But the judgment was based on a petition that said the British government promulgated the CrPC in the wake of the mutiny of 1857 to suppress the Indians. A greater travesty of the rule of law is difficult to imagine. ‘Reforms’ are being carried out on the basis of claims in a false affidavit, which appears to have been examined in the home ministry with its eyes wide shut. So much for the supposed accountability of the Delhi police to the ministry.
There will be no meaningful and lasting respite till basic reforms are carried out to democratise the police force.
Ashok Kapur is a former IAS officer