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REWIND
New Delhi, 20 November 2025
A
GOVERNMENT MUST GOVERN
By
Inder Jit
(Released
on 14 July 1987)
Top
level exercises are on once again at New Delhi and Chandigarh to cope with terrorism,
which continues to play havoc with our peace-loving people. Appropriately, the
Prime Minister, Mr Rajiv Gandhi and the other Government leaders have expressed
great horror at the latest savage slaughter of innocent men, women and children
in Punjab and Haryana. In addition, the Union Home Minister, Mr Buta Singh, air
dashed to the scenes of the gruesome bus shootings. But veteran and reputed
administrators candidly feel that little will come out of the latest spurt of
activity unless first things are tackled first. Mr Dharma Vira, former Union
Cabinet Secretary and former Governor of Punjab, West Bengal and Karnataka, for
instance, said to me on Friday: "A Government must govern. It must also be
seen to govern. Alas, this has not been happening for some time now. There seem
to be no priorities--and too much of ad hocism and fire-fighting. We need to
take a leaf out of Sardar Patel's book. He said what he meant and meant what he
said. This earned the Sardar nation-wide respect and enabled him to govern this
country firmly".
There is no denying the fact
that terrorism is not easy to tackle. A terrorist chooses his victim or victims
at will--as also the place and timing of the crime. Further, no Government can
possibly post policemen at every single meter of its territory, nor has it the
whe-rewhithal to do so. What, however, enables any Government to ensure peace
and security is what has been called down the centuries as its “waqar" or
"roaab"-namely respect, reputation and fear. The older among our
fellow citizens often recall nostalgically some great boons of the British Raj.
For one thing, the dreaded thuggery. For another, law and order was ensured. No
one during those times dared so much as touch the uniform of a policeman, let
alone take a shot at him. The reason was simple. The people were left in no
doubt that the entire might of the British empire would come crashing down on
their heads if they committed even a technical assault on the guardians of law
and order. But things have undergone a sea change. Even stern warnings from the
highest in the Government have lost meaning.
Tragically, fighting
terrorism has not received the priority it deserves. Indeed, if the truth be
told, it continues to receive an incredibly low priority, notwithstanding tall
claims. The National Police Commission, which was headed by Mr Dharma Vira and
included Mr K.F. Rustamji and Mr N.S. Saksena, two of India's finest policemen,
was keen to devote a whole chapter to terrorism in its reports. But the Centre
was not interested. Mr Rustamji himself told me some two years ago:
"Before we could conclude the work of the Police Commission, we got a
letter from the Home Ministry that we should wind up our work. We informed the
Ministry that we had made studios on important subjects like terrorism and
security on railways, and we thought we should include subjects like
para-military forces and intelligence. But the Home Ministry said in an abrupt
reply that all this was unnecessary and that we must complete our work
immediately. Five years ago there was some complacency regarding terrorism.
This probably accounts for it." Clearly, those who took this view showed
lack of foresight. Terrorism had already raised its ugly head.
Meanwhile, the police and
its capacity to maintain order has gravely declined. No, this is not an off-the-cuff
personal opinion. The view is shared by some of India's most respected and
experienced administrators, according to an informal poll conducted by me over
the past week. Among other things, opinion appears agreed that the police force
has been, more or less, rendered ineffective during the past two decades. Much
of the problem has arisen because of political interference. What is more, even
the armed police has been greatly emasculated. Nothing reflects this more than
increasing dependence on the army and para-military forces for maintaining
peace and order. Time and again, the Army has been called in by the civil power
in preference to the armed police and the para-military forces. Worse, the
army's help is being sought not for short periods but for months, even years at
end. All this is being done without the slightest efficiency in the process? Should
this work not be done by the para-military forces?
Ironically, the present
culture of the police system, according to the Dharma Vira Commission,
"appears to be a continuation of what obtained under the British regime
when the police functioned ruthlessly as an agent for sustaining the Government
in power." (The Police Commission of 1860 had observed that the organised
police as proposed by them would be "politically more useful.")
Equally ironically, the system has not moved far since the days of the Indian
Police Commission of 1902-03. This Commission found the police far from
efficient, defective in training and organisation, and one which was generally
regarded as "corrupt and oppressive." It concluded that "the
police force throughout the country is in a most unsatisfactory condition, that
abuses are common everywhere, that this involves great injury to the people and
discredit to the Government, and that radical reforms are urgently
necessary..." The Dharma Vira Commission commented: "What the Police
Commission said in 1903 appears more or less equally applicable to the
conditions obtaining in the police force today."
That is not all. Only last
week, Mr Saksena, who was IG of police, UP, and later Director General of CRP
before he was appointed a member of the Police Commission, went on record to
confirm something that has been happening for long. He wrote: "Fighting
terrorism is quite low on our priority. The first priority of the rulers is to
ensure, in the light of their own perception, that votes are not lost… The
second priority is that their own party members--many of
them are goondas ---are not harmed. The third priority is to ensure that
maximum damage is inflicted on the Government's political opponents.
Maintenance of law and order comes only after this.” In fact, he went on to
assert that the ruling party politicians did not need a popular police.
Instead, they needed "a stooge police force 365 days a year for their
needs." The National Police Commission, for its part, discovered that
police officers and policemen had been frequently and arbitrarily transferred,
mostly as a means of punishment and harassment. An average period of stay in
the same post for Inspector or General of Police between 1973 and 1977 was one
year and eight months!
Terrorist activity is linked
with the problem of unlicensed arms and the violation of the Arms Act. The
Commission found an increasing trend to use firearms in the commission of
offences. The crimes involving use of firearms was found to be the highest in
UP, Bihar, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab and Rajasthan. More than 80 per
cent of the arms used in offences in 1972 and 1974 were found to be unlicensed.
A sharp increase of 109.5 per cent was recorded in the registration of cases
under the Arms Act in 1977 as compared to 1972.
Among the States, UP showed
the highest volume of Arms (2010) (Perhaps Punjab now leads all.) The
Commission was clearly of the view that there was urgent need for reforms in
the Arms Act, preferably, a new Arms Act. Among other things, the Commission
expressed itself in favour of making the Arms Act more stringent and prescribing
severer punishments. In the UK, possessing a firearm with the intent to endanger
life, or using a firearm to resist arrest carries a maximum penalty of life
imprisonment. Should we not go one step further in combating terrorists?
Much of the terrorism in
Punjab today springs from the demand for Khalistan, especially from the youth.
Not many among them know that the issue came up for discussion between Nehru
and Master Tara Singh, as disclosed by Durga Das in his memoirs: India from Curzon
to Nehru And After. He recalls that a deputation of which Bakshi Tok Chand,
Lala Yodhraj and he were members, waited on Nehru on September 20, 1947 in the
Ministry of External Affairs and urged him to ask the Sikh refugees to state
categorically whether they wished to have a small province of their own. The deputationists
did not want this problem to take a serious turn later. Nehru replied
"that Master Tara Singh had met him the previous day and that he had asked
the Sikh leader whether his community wanted Khalistan (a Sikh State). Pandit Nehru
said he had never seen Master Tara Singh so crestfallon as on that day. The
Sikh leader vehemently protested against any idea of Khalistan and said that
the Sikhs, being a very small section of the people of India, would not pick
any quarrel with them. They wished to remain citizens of India and live with
the Hindus as brothers."
Political wisdom demands
that this basic unity and brotherhood between the Hindus and the Sikhs is
preserved at all costs--and that meaningful steps are taken to win back the
hearts and minds of those who have unfortunately chosen to take to the destructive
path of violence and bloodshed. At the same time, there is need to take both
short-term and long-term measures to combat terrorism and to tackle it with an
iron hand. Surprisingly, little appears to have been done so far to implement
many common sense suggestions made inside Parliament and outside. These include
provision of armed escorts and wire-less on buses, movement through terrorist-prone
areas in convoys and use of helicopters for tracking down offenders against
humanity. The Dharma Vira Commission could perhaps be revived briefly to go
into the question of terrorism and submit a report which it was ill-advisedly
prevented from preparing. Above all, the Prime Minister and his colleagues
should be clear on one basic point. There is no substitute for strength and
action and for sending the right signals. Ultimately, a Government must govern.---INFA
(Copyright, India News and Feature Alliance)
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