Thursday, August 31, 2017

PIERCING THE PANCHKULA HAZE- A REJOINDER

PIERCING THE PANCHKULA HAZE- A REJOINDER

The Ideas Page of the Indian Express dated August 31, 2017 is devoted to putting across the views of two police officers about what happened in Panchkula on August 25, 2017.While the senior retired police officer Mr Prakash Singh is of the view that there was a “terrible failure of leadership in Haryana at all levels-political, bureaucratic and police,” the serving and comparatively junior police  officer Mr Abhinav Kumar seems to think that  the blame   being ascribed to Haryana police for their failure to control the violence  is unjust. This view is “at best naïve and ill informed, and at worst maliciously biased. Either way it is wrong”

I read Mr Kumar’s article with great interest but with greater anguish, because, in my view, the article is heavily biased in favour of the police.

Why does Mr Kumar feel that to blame the police entirely for what happened in Panchkula on that fateful day is wrong. The only argument made is that “in the present scheme of things”, the decisions on allowing the crowd to assemble and using force to disperse them are “in the hands of the political executive.” There are two points that need to be made here. Firstly, what Mr Kumar says is contrary to the law and to all the instructions contained in the Police manuals.  Chapter 10 of the Cr P C on Maintenance of Public Order and Tranquility does not recognize any authority to disperse an unlawful assembly other than the police and the magistracy.  Panchkula being a Commissionarte of Police, the responsibility of making preparatory and other arrangements was entirely that of the police. Secondly, if, in the “present scheme of things” the police authority to enforce the law of the land has been completely eroded due to political pressure, the police are as much to blame as the political executive. However, Mr Kumar further seems to think that the “present scheme of things” is somewhat reasonable as he suggests that “one cannot easily take away the right of political executive to make the decision to exercise restraint till the last moment” In other words, if the political executive decides to exercise restraint due to political considerations and the crowd turns into a riotous mob, causing large scale death and destruction, neither the political executive nor the police are to be blamed. Mr Kumar does not suggest who should be held accountable in such a situation. How much restraint is to be exercised and how much force is to be used to ensure that law and order is maintained are the decisions that, according to law and rules and regulations, are to be taken by the law enforcement authorities.

Riot drill teaches the police officers to plan their tactics of dealing with a mob in three stages-the preparatory, action and after action stage.  The inept handling of the Haryana police is seen more at the preparatory than at other stages.  It is learnt that intelligence was available that there was a danger of serious disturbance occurring at Panchkula on that day.  The hooligans came prepared and armed, travelling long distances by trains, buses and other means, but no action was taken to stop them from reaching the trouble spot.  Nothing can justify the failure of the police to take preventive action to control the crowd by saying that they were pressurised by the political executive to do so.

Any censure of police action in such situations is generally dismissed by police officers as unwarranted armchair criticism coming from those who did not have to bear the brunt of mob’s fury in the form of stones and other missiles but who became wise in hindsight after the police controlled the situation.   This response is so common, but is also so shortsighted, as it deprives the police of an opportunity to review different incidents to find what went wrong with their methods and tactics, their training, equipment and command and control.   A review of such incidents would enable them to learn how to develop a high level of riot control capability, which would help in reducing the intensity of confrontations and in managing situations more effectively in future than was done this time. It is this type of review that needs to be done by the police and not to pass on the blame to political executive or to other authorities.

 The number of security personnel deployed by the centre was probably more than the number of state police personnel stationed in Panchkula to control the situation. Despite the Police and Public Order being State subjects under the Constitution of India, the central government has taken interest in policing in the country.   From the very beginning, it has focused on raising and expanding its own para military set up.  Most of its expenditure on Police every year is spent on meeting the requirements of para military forces. This expenditure has been rising every year. There has been very heavy deployment of these forces on law and order duties in states.  While the state governments have found it administratively convenient and economically beneficial to let the central forces handle their serious law and order problems, the availability of central assistance has unwittingly inhibited the development of their police forces.  What is required   is to train and develop the state police forces to become effective enough to deal with such situations on their own.


 The above rejoinder was written in response to an article by Mr Abhinav Kumar, a serving IPS officer and published in the Indian Express dated August 31, 2017. Mr. Kumar’s article is reproduced below:

Piercing the Panchkula Haze

The real tragedy of Panchkula is not the blame game and turf wars. It is the death of nearly 40 citizens at the hands of the state. 

The last week was not a good time to be a godman in India. It was, however, a worse time to be a policeman in India. That the police were cowardly, incompetent and ineffective is a cliché of our times. It can be applied anywhere, most recently to the violence in Panchkula. So whether one believes that the situation was saved by the brave woman deputy commissioner of Panchkula, or by the arrival of the Indian Army, all the different narratives are united in their contempt for the conduct of the Haryana Police and the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs) deployed with them. Having seen the challenges faced by the Haryana police over the last week at close quarters, this view is at best naive and ill-informed, and at worst maliciously biased. Either way, it is quite simply, wrong.

The police leadership of Haryana is being criticised for allowing a large crowd to gather in Panchkula in the days preceding the judgment. Within minutes of the verdict, mob frenzy took over. For nearly an hour, the Dera premis went on the rampage, burning vehicles, attacking police personnel on duty and damaging government property. Even the media were not spared. Their reporters were brutally attacked and their OB vans were burnt. The sky above Panchkula turned grey with smoke.
The initial onslaught certainly took the security forces by surprise. Once the order to disperse the mob by any means necessary was given, the sound of gunfire rang out and within a few minutes, the mob ran helter-skelter. An hour of mob fury was followed by an hour of the state displaying its heavy hand. It left 39 persons dead, while scores more were injured.

As with all such things in our country, politics soon overtook any rational analysis and debate about what had just happened, largely in Panchkula, but also in fits and spurts in other parts of Haryana and Punjab. The epicentre of the Dera, Sirsa, saw six deaths. While Punjab, too, was the scene of some destruction of property, thankfully there was no loss of life.
Sit
The events of Panchkula undoubtedly pose many uncomfortable questions for all of us in positions of authority. However, even before the dust has settled, the blame game and scrambling to take credit based on individual ambition and institutional turf has begun. One account would have us believe that but for one brave IAS officer, the ransacking of Panchkula was imminent. Another would have us believe that all was lost till the army arrived and saved the bumbling civilian administration yet again. Both narratives are economical with the truth. The officer was throughout escorted by policemen and the army did not fire a single shot. This is not to deny them their role in bringing the violence under control, but only to place it in perspective and set the record straight. What is more worrying is such simplistic self-serving narratives find takers in public discourse.

Let’s be clear on one count. In the present scheme of things, the decision on whether a large crowd is to be allowed to assemble in the first place, whether preventive measures are to be taken, or whether a punitive response can take place only after violence has happened, is in the hands of the political executive. It is not a decision a chief secretary or a DGP can take on their own. As for the political executive, over the years, a consensus, cutting across party lines, has emerged that the political costs of pre-emptive action are not acceptable. It is to let the administration respond after violence has taken place and not second guess the intention of an assembled crowd and be accused of high-handedness. Legally, too, the bar for using deadly force in self-defence is set much lower than for using it to preempt violence. We can call it cowardice, incompetence, or collusion. But one cannot easily take away the right of the political executive to make the decision to exercise restraint till the last possible moment. This issue requires a more nuanced discussion and debate.

The second issue is about the capacity of the state to deal with such crowds. Over the years, the states of India have simply not invested enough in the police. As a result, for anything more than a routine, local law and order problem, the states end up seeking assistance from the Centre. This is usually provided in the form of CAPFs, and in extreme cases, by the Indian Army. Over the years, the CAPFs have grown to number nearly a million and provide crucial support to local police forces in a range of situations. However, other than the CRPF, the deployment of all other CAPFs comes at the cost of their primary mission and training. Similarly, the preparedness of the army is also affected by frequent interventions in civil emergencies. We really need to have a national mission to build state police capacities. A better-staffed, better-trained and better-equipped police force with its ear to the ground would be a more effective bulwark against law and order problems than central forces.

Last but not the least is the role of the Indian Army in such situations. In the aftermath of Panchkula, a section of our military veterans took to the media with uncompromising expressions of contempt and ridicule for civil authorities and the police. This is not only unfortunate, but also betrays a profound ignorance about civil-military relations. These self-styled custodians of the Indian Army seem to exist in a sociological and historical bubble. More worryingly, they think that military tactics and value systems are the best way to assess the response of civil authorities in law and order situations. They forget that the crowds we face are not our enemy, retreating before them and showing restraint in the face of their violent provocations is not cowardice. Shoot first ask questions later may be a sound military dictum, but it would be a poor policing tactic. The army coming to the aid of civilian authority is not a favour extended by the former to the citizens; it is an integral part of the charter of duties of any armed forces in a democracy.

The real tragedy of Panchkula is not the blame game and turf wars. It is the death of nearly 40 citizens at the hands of the state. They were not demanding the break-up of India. They were blinded by their faith in a conman, who, perhaps, gave some sense of meaning and purpose in their life. By all accounts, they came from the poorest and most marginalised sections of our society. Instead of chest thumping and finger pointing, it is important we find ways and means to ensure that such a tragedy is not repeated.