Broken System
Dysfunction,
Abuse, and Impunity in the Indian Police
India: Overhaul Abusive,
Failing Police System
Disrepair of Police Forces and Lack of Accountability Contribute
to Rights Violations'
Bandobast
|
Literally “ discipline,” refers to police duties such as
patrolling events and security work
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chowki
|
Police s tructure designated as an outpost
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Circle Officer
|
Officer in charge of a police circle, which consists of a few
police stations
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Daily Diary
|
Record police must keep under Police Act of 1861 that includes
information regarding complainants, charges, persons arrested, property
police take into possession, and witnesses police examine
|
Dalit
|
Literally broken people, a term for so-called “untouchables”
who traditionally occupied the lowest place in the Hindu caste
system
|
DGP
|
Director General of Police, the highest-ranking police
official of each state police organization
|
FIR
|
FirsT ormation Report, the recorded complaint of a crime
filed by police
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hijra
|
male-to-female transgender individuals, typically
working-class
|
IPS
|
Indian Police Service, the cadre of senior police administered
by the central government
|
lathi
|
Literally “stick,” the long baton-type weapon carried by most
police
|
munshi
|
Literally “the writer,” a police officer who maintains records
|
NHRC
|
National Human Rights Commission
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pradhan
|
Village official
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SP
|
Superintendent of Police, in charge of a police district
|
SHRC
|
State Human Rights Commission
|
SI
|
Sub-inspector
|
SHO
|
Station house officer
|
SO
|
Station officer, the same as a station house officer
|
thana
|
Police station
|
“This week, I was told to do an ‘encounter,’”
a police officer we will call Officer Singh told Human Rights Watch in January
2009. He was referring to the practice of taking into custody and
extrajudicially executing an individual, then claiming that the victim died
after initiating a shoot-out with police. “I am looking for my target,” he
said. “I will eliminate him.”
Working in Uttar Pradesh, Officer Singh is the
kind of police officer who should be in prison for misusing his authority.
Instead he is protected by his superiors. It is in this way that impunity
continues to thrive in India—and the reputation of the police continues to
slide.
But as we spoke to Officer Singh, we heard
about other aspects of the reality of policing in India. Officer Singh said he
had hardly a day off since he began working as a sub-inspector, or
investigating officer, for the Uttar Pradesh police ten years ago. “I’ve slept
ten hours in the last three days. How is a person who hasn’t slept in three
days supposed to behave properly?” he asked. “The pressure cooker will burst.”
Officer Singh described hours crammed with too
many duties:
patrolling events, escorting VIPs, investigating crime, and, he added without hesitation, fabricating police records. He said he was working on a murder case but had at best a few hours at night to devote to solving it. “I sent evidence to the forensic lab five months ago, but the case is still pending,” he said. Nonetheless, he said he was under tremendous pressure from superiors to solve the case, or face suspension.
He admitted that in the past, in similar straits, he had beaten suspects to elicit confessions–that’s what his superiors expected of him. “It is presumed that I’m doing it,” he told Human Rights Watch. “It’s done before them. Sometimes they are doing it.”
patrolling events, escorting VIPs, investigating crime, and, he added without hesitation, fabricating police records. He said he was working on a murder case but had at best a few hours at night to devote to solving it. “I sent evidence to the forensic lab five months ago, but the case is still pending,” he said. Nonetheless, he said he was under tremendous pressure from superiors to solve the case, or face suspension.
He admitted that in the past, in similar straits, he had beaten suspects to elicit confessions–that’s what his superiors expected of him. “It is presumed that I’m doing it,” he told Human Rights Watch. “It’s done before them. Sometimes they are doing it.”
Despite his willingness to beat people
he determines are criminals—and he made it clear that he
had beaten many—Officer Singh said he did not initially intend to be
a dishonest and abusive crime fighter. “No one is born corrupt. It’s
a tailor-made system: if you’re not corrupt, you won’t survive.”
*
*
*
Officer Singh’s admissions, though disturbing,
would likely be unremarkable to many Indian police officers, criminal suspects,
lawyers and other observers. While India rightly touts itself as an emerging
economic powerhouse that is also the world’s largest democracy, its police
forces—the most visible arm of the Indian state—are widely regarded within
India as lawless, abusive and ineffective.
A dangerous anachronism, the police have
largely failed to evolve from the ruler-supportive, repressive forces they were
designed to be under Britain’s colonial rule. While sixty years later much of
India is in the process of rapid modernization, the police continue to use their
old methods. Instead of policing through public consent and participation, the
police use abuse and threats as a primary crime investigation and law
enforcement tactic.
The institutional culture of police practically discourages officers from acting otherwise, failing to give them the resources, training, ethical environment, and encouragement to develop professional police tactics. Many officers even told Human Rights Watch that they were ordered or expected to commit abuses.
The institutional culture of police practically discourages officers from acting otherwise, failing to give them the resources, training, ethical environment, and encouragement to develop professional police tactics. Many officers even told Human Rights Watch that they were ordered or expected to commit abuses.
In its research, Human Rights Watch examined
these two separate, but linked issues: abuses by the police against
individuals, usually criminal suspects, and the conditions that facilitated and
encouraged police to commit those abuses.
Our findings, when read alongside other work that has been done by non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the media and even some government bodies, make it clear that misbehavior is deeply rooted in institutional practice. It persists and sometimes flourishes due to government failure to hold abusers accountable and to overhaul the structure and practices that enable abusive patterns of behavior.
Our findings, when read alongside other work that has been done by non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the media and even some government bodies, make it clear that misbehavior is deeply rooted in institutional practice. It persists and sometimes flourishes due to government failure to hold abusers accountable and to overhaul the structure and practices that enable abusive patterns of behavior.
Drawing on the extensive existing
documentation of human rights abuses by the Indian police, Human Rights Watch
conducted its own research and found four clusters of issues warranting
attention, addressed in separate subsections of this report: police failure to
investigate crimes; arrest on false charges and illegal detention; torture and
ill-treatment; and extrajudicial killings.
Traditionally marginalized groups are
especially vulnerable to each of the first three abuses. Though stemming from
the discriminatory biases of police officers, their vulnerability is also the
product of an abusive police culture in which an individual’s ability to
pay a bribe, trade on social status or call on political connections often
determines whether they will be assisted or abused.
Why do these abuses persist? Part of the
problem is the working conditions of individual officers. At the level of the civil
police station, where junior and low-ranking police often reside and deal with
suspects or victims, we found that civil police, particularly constables, live
and work in abysmal conditions.
They are often exhausted and demoralized, always on call, working long hours without shifts and necessary equipment, only to return to government-provided tents or filthy barracks for a few hours’ sleep.
Junior-ranking officers often face unrealistic demands from their superiors to solve cases quickly. Even if officially encouraged, their use of professional crime investigation techniques is effectively discouraged by the dearth of time, training and equipment with which they operate. These officers also face frequent intervention in investigations by local political figures, who sometimes act to protect known criminals.
They are often exhausted and demoralized, always on call, working long hours without shifts and necessary equipment, only to return to government-provided tents or filthy barracks for a few hours’ sleep.
Junior-ranking officers often face unrealistic demands from their superiors to solve cases quickly. Even if officially encouraged, their use of professional crime investigation techniques is effectively discouraged by the dearth of time, training and equipment with which they operate. These officers also face frequent intervention in investigations by local political figures, who sometimes act to protect known criminals.
To get around these systemic problems many
officers take “short-cuts.” Officers told Human Rights Watch they often cut
their caseloads by refusing to register crime complaints. At other times, they
use illegal detention, torture and ill-treatment to punish criminals against
whom they lack the time or inclination to build cases, or to elicit
confessions, even ones they know are false.
Such abuses contribute to a climate of fear.
Many Indians avoid any contact with the police, believing not only that they
will not receive assistance but that they risk demands for bribes, illegal
detention, torture, or even death. Facing a reclusive public, the police are
unable to get tips from informants or the cooperation of witnesses, which are
both critical to solving cases and preventing crime. This, of course, creates a
vicious cycle, as crimes go unreported and unpunished and the pressures on the
police to deal with rising criminality increase.
The government elected in May 2009 has
promised to actively pursue police reform. It should start by recognizing the
need to transform the institution from one that enables and encourages
officers to commit abuse to one that promotes human rights and the rule of law,
without exception.
A critical step is holding abusive officers
accountable. Those who commit torture or other abuses must be treated as
the criminals they are. There cannot be one standard for police who use
violence and another for average citizens. At the same time, the incentives
must change for police officers. Officers facing suspension if they disobey
illegal orders, or fail to meet their superiors’ expectations to solve
crimes without the necessary means, have little incentive to abstain from
abuse
. In the long-run, a sustainable drop in police abuses requires an overhaul of archaic police laws and structures. Investment in training, personnel and equipment is critical to building the professional, rights-respecting police forces that an emergent India deserves.
. In the long-run, a sustainable drop in police abuses requires an overhaul of archaic police laws and structures. Investment in training, personnel and equipment is critical to building the professional, rights-respecting police forces that an emergent India deserves.
The
Indian Police: A Dangerous State of Disrepair'
Although the police are tasked with battling
India’s most pressing problems—including armed militancy, terrorism, and
organized crime—a lack of political commitment and investment by the state has
left the police overstretched and ill-equipped. There is just one civil police
officer for every 1,037 Indian residents, far below Asia’s regional average of
one police officer for 558 people and the global average of 333 people.
Police infrastructure is crumbling. Decaying,
colonial-era police stations and posts across India are stocked with antiquated
equipment and lack sufficient police vehicles, phones, computers, and even
stationery. A severe police staffing shortage is compounded by additional
demands on an already stretched force. Police are routinely diverted to protect
“VIPs”—usually politicians, business people, and entertainment
figures. Senior police officials frequently use low-ranking
staff as orderlies and even as personal family servants.
The police structure in India is based on a
colonial law that did not provide the lower ranks, usually local recruits, with
operational authority or advanced professional training. Inexplicably, that
system continues six decades after the end of British rule in India.
Constables, the bottom rank, make up as much as 85 percent of the Indian
police, but for the most part they are not trained to investigate crime
complaints.
Junior and low-ranking police are frequently
demoralized due to degrading working and living conditions. Police are under
constant stress due to the statutory requirement that they be available for
duty 24 hours a day, seven days a week—a grueling reality for the police we
interviewed, many of whom said they were hardly ever permitted a day off and some
of whom, living in barracks, literally had not been given time to see their
families for weeks. Police say they are exhausted and have no time for exercise
or recreation. The Director-General of Police in Uttar Pradesh boasted to Human
Rights Watch,
If you
brought a US policeman here he’d commit suicide within one day. [Here], you are
literally thrown against the wall. We don’t have a shift of 8 to 10 hours, it
is the system we have: we work 24 hours a day.
Many low-ranking police officers live in barracks
that are deteriorating, cramped, and without enough beds. A constable in
Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, told Human Rights Watch,
It’s
just like I’m a prisoner.... There’s no medical facilities, no toilet.
Junior-ranking police officers have little
chance of promotion and are subject to the unrealistic demands of senior
officers who are for the most part directly recruited into management
positions, and often have no firsthand knowledge of the difficulties the lower
ranks face.
Political
Interference and Stalled Efforts at Reform
Decades of partisan policing—politically
motivated refusal to register complaints, arbitrary detention, and torture and
killings sometimes perpetrated by police at the behest of national and state
politicians—have resulted in an unprecedented level of public distrust and fear
of the police. In a culture of shifarish, or favors, only Indians
with powerful connections can be confident they will obtain police assistance.
State and local politicians routinely tell police officers to drop investigations against people with political connections, including known criminals, and to harass or file false charges against political opponents. As one police officer told Human Rights Watch:
State and local politicians routinely tell police officers to drop investigations against people with political connections, including known criminals, and to harass or file false charges against political opponents. As one police officer told Human Rights Watch:
The
problem is that law enforcement is only possible up to a limit. Anti-social
elements are protected by the powerful. Police is supposed to be tough on
criminals. But criminals are protected, supported and rewarded, so the police
who act against them are helpless. No officer is in a position to protect
anyone else. They are barely able to protect themselves.
Police at all ranks say that they fear
reprimand or punishment if, in the course of doing their jobs, they act against
individuals with political connections.
In 2006, the Supreme Court handed down a
landmark decision, Prakash Singh and Others v. Union of India and
Others, that directed the central and state governments to enact new police
laws to reduce political interference.
Unfortunately, the central government and most state governments have either significantly or completely failed to implement the Court’s order. This suggests that key government officials have yet to accept the rule of law or the urgency of undertaking comprehensive police reform, including the need to make police accountable for widespread human rights violations.
The Indian government also has yet to recognize the immediate need to improve the working and living conditions of low-ranking police which. While those conditions in no way justify the human rights violations committed by police, addressing them is critical to changing a working environment that facilitates, condones, and encourages such violations.
Unfortunately, the central government and most state governments have either significantly or completely failed to implement the Court’s order. This suggests that key government officials have yet to accept the rule of law or the urgency of undertaking comprehensive police reform, including the need to make police accountable for widespread human rights violations.
The Indian government also has yet to recognize the immediate need to improve the working and living conditions of low-ranking police which. While those conditions in no way justify the human rights violations committed by police, addressing them is critical to changing a working environment that facilitates, condones, and encourages such violations.
Human
Rights Violations by Police
In this report, Human Rights Watch documented
four abuses frequently committed by police in parts of India: failure to
investigate crimes, arbitrary arrest and illegal detention, custodial torture,
and extrajudicial killings.
Failure
to Register Complaints and Investigate Crime
Police in India frequently fail to register
crime complaints, called First Information Reports (FIRs), and to
investigate crimes. Police officers told Human Rights Watch that they are often
under pressure from political leaders to show a reduction in crime by
registering fewer FIRs. Some said that they face suspension or reprimand
if they register too many. Police also blame their failure to investigate cases
on insufficient personnel and a reluctance to take on new cases that add to an
already heavy workload.
Traditionally vulnerable communities bear the
brunt of this neglect. For instance, according to local NGOs, police often do
not register complaints or investigate crimes against Dalits (so-called
“untouchables”) under special laws enacted to ensure Dalit protection.
Police, including specially designated Crimes
Against Women cells, fail to sufficiently aid victims of domestic violence.
According to NGOs and police themselves, police often urge victims to
“compromise” with their spouses or spouses’ families, even when women allege
repeated and severe physical abuse.
Women’s rights activists say that police often do not investigate rape cases and re-traumatize victims who approach them for help through their hostile or inadequate response.
For example, when 16-year-old Sunita (a pseudonym) became pregnant after she was raped by her cousin, her family members in a village near Sitapur, Uttar Pradesh beat her and threatened to kill her. Police refused to register an FIR for the rape, and advised her to get an abortion and marry someone from another village.
Women’s rights activists say that police often do not investigate rape cases and re-traumatize victims who approach them for help through their hostile or inadequate response.
For example, when 16-year-old Sunita (a pseudonym) became pregnant after she was raped by her cousin, her family members in a village near Sitapur, Uttar Pradesh beat her and threatened to kill her. Police refused to register an FIR for the rape, and advised her to get an abortion and marry someone from another village.
Crime victims who are poor are often unable to
obtain police assistance. They cannot afford to pay bribes that police
ordinarily demand for FIR registration, or for the costs of investigation that
victims are expected to cover on behalf of the police. They are less likely to
be able to call local political figures to intervene with police on their
behalf, while their perpetrators may have police protection due to political
connections.
Illegal
Arrest and Detention, Police Torture and Ill-Treatment
Police officers sometimes make arrests in
retaliation for complaints of police abuse, in return for bribes, or due to
political considerations or the influence of powerful local figures. They also
admit that they use unlawful coercion, including torture, to elicit confessions
to the charges they fabricate. Police often fail to follow procedures mandated
by the Supreme Court in DK Basu v. West Bengal, including
production of a suspect before a magistrate within 24 hours of arrest.A
Bangalore police officer admitted:
We do
use some extralegal methods. You might disagree, but we cannot do all work by
the book. Then the police would be completely ineffective.
This failure to “work by the book” is
reflected in frequent torture and other ill-treatment of suspects in police
custody. Human Rights Watch found that severe ill-treatment sometimes
intensifies over the period of an individual’s detention. For instance, in
December 2007 police tortured 18-year-old Ram Chandra Prasad, a murder suspect,
for five nights in Varanasi to elicit a confession. Prasad told Human Rights
Watch:
After
they finished tea they pulled off my shirt and trousers. The constable kicked
me, and then constables came and held my hands and legs. They drenched me with
a bucket of cold water...For one and a half hours, I was beaten like this....
[On the third night] the SI [sub-inspector] and SO [station officer] pressed
their feet against my thighs. I felt my veins, it felt like they would burst.
They said, “We’ll make you impotent and you’ll be of no use.”
Individuals who are poor and socially or
politically marginalized are especially vulnerable to prolonged detention and
repeated ill-treatment because they are unable to bribe police to secure their
release and are unlikely to have connections to local political figures who can
intervene. Twenty-year-old Pradeep Singh died after suffering a severe beating
by police in Chitti, Dhankaur, Uttar Pradesh, in January 2007. According to
Singh’s family, police arrested Pradeep with two other men. Police released the
other two after they paid a police bribe. But Singh’s family, Dalits with
little money, were unable to pay the police. Singh’s grandfather Kedara, age
83, visited him in lockup before he died:
When I
looked at him, I felt very sad. He couldn’t stand up straight. Why? We are poor
people. We don’t have money to give to them. And if it’s our caste, then they
beat up all the more.... We don’t have money ourselves, where do we give money
to police from? If we gave the police [money], probably it would have helped my
boy.
Human Rights Watch’s investigations found that
the police sometimes fail to provide arrested children with the special
protections afforded under India’s Juvenile Justice Act, such as the
requirement to present any detained child before a special Juvenile Justice
Board within 24 hours of arrest. Several boys in Bangalore described how police
subjected them to electric shocks and prolonged beatings.
Socially and politically marginalized
communities are subject to frequent sexual and physical harassment and street
beatings by police. Members of the hijra community in
Bangalore said that physical harassment and abuse by police had become
increasingly routine since 2007.
Bangalore sex workers described police
beatings and sexual harassment. One woman told Human Rights Watch,
I was standing on the street. It was quite
deserted. A policeman came and slapped me and beat me up very badly. I was
lying on the ground. When I begged for water, he unzipped his pants and offered
his penis.
Some police officers admit that “using force”
to elicit confessions from criminal suspects is their primary investigation
tool, rather than gathering forensic evidence and witness accounts. False
confessions lead police to gather faulty evidence, which frequently results in
cases being thrown of out of court or wrongful convictions.
Impunity
for Extrajudicial Killings
Officer Singh, discussed above, described to
Human Rights Watch how senior officers boast of ordering killings.
The SP
[superintendent of police] will say, “Under my regime, so many criminals were
“encountered.” I fear being put in jail, but if I don’t do it, I’ll lose my
position.
While the practice is not the norm in most of
India, fake encounter killings occur frequently. Many take place in Singh’s
Uttar Pradesh state, where the National Human Rights Commission reported 201
complaints of such killings in 2007, more than any other state.
Police are usually the only eyewitnesses to
these alleged encounters, which are typically carried out by junior and
low-ranking police. Considering the long history and scale of this practice, it
is likely that state officials and senior police are not only aware
of these killings, but allow, unofficially sanction
or even order these killings.
Criminal suspects or their family members are
frequently the targets of fake encounter killings. In the cases Human Rights
Watch documented, the facts strongly suggested the implausibility
of official accounts of the killings.
For instance, Sugriv Singh Yadav, accused of
several crimes, died on August 6, 2008, in Faizabad, Uttar Pradesh. According
to police, Yadav was shot dead while fleeing on a motorbike after he and three
others stole a mobile phone and 10,000 rupees (about US$210) from a man who
then complained to the police. But according to an attorney for Yadav’s family:
“The motorbike that the robbers were using had not a drop of petrol in it.
There was no blood at the site of the incident where Sugriv was apparently
shot.”
Obstacles
to Police Accountability
Police can usually commit
extrajudicial killings with impunity. The Indian media and NGOs have documented
hundreds of such killings but their efforts at accountability have
been hampered by systematic police deniability. The absence of records,
including in many cases a post-mortem examination or registry of arrest and
detention, makes it very difficult to disprove the police’s account.
In some cases, police deny any knowledge of or
responsibility for killings, even when the subject was last seen alive in
police custody. For instance, police deny any involvement in the June 18, 2006,
death of Abdul Khalid in Uttar Pradesh state, even though his wife Sakia
Begum witnessed his arrest that night. She believes he was later killed in
custody and his body was abandoned in a field near her house. Immediately after
the arrest, she ran to the police station but found it locked and empty. She
told Human Rights Watch:
We were
looking all over for him.... Meanwhile, our neighbors called the police to say
that there was a body lying in the field near our house. The police took my son
there for identification. It was my husband.
Independent investigations are critical to
reducing impunity, but despite the presence of the national human
rights commissions and their state counterparts, they are rare in much of
India.
Police investigations, either initiated by
police or undertaken at the direction of external agencies,
are often ineffective due to a “code of silence” that makes police
unlikely to disclose incriminating evidence. In the absence of an independent
investigation, officers who issue illegal orders or pressure subordinates to
carry out abuses can lay the blame exclusively on their subordinates.
Criminal prosecution has the potential to
check police abuse, but victims often do not file cases because they fear
police retaliation. Another major obstacle is section 197 of the Criminal
Procedure Code, which provides immunity from prosecution to all public
officials unless the government approves the prosecution.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC)
has the authority to recommend an independent investigation either by another
division of the local police or by the Central Bureau of Investigation,
but this often results in the police effectively investigating itself.
Even where this is done with integrity, the process does not have the
appearance of independence and impartiality, leaving victims and families
suspicious of the process.
In most cases the NHRC only recommends
that state governments provide victims with interim compensation. The award of
compensation to victims without proper prosecutions of officers who commit the
crimes and their superiors who order them is inadequate to halt
recurring violations. The country’s 18 state human rights commissions (SHRCs)
vary greatly in resources and willingness to act, and local lawyers and
activists describe SHRC staff as inadequate in number, lacking human rights
training, and biased against complaints, factors that lead them to routinely
defer to police accounts of a given incident.
Even in the exceptional case in which action
is taken, the punishment most often consists of temporary suspension or
transfer of the offending officer to another police station. Until officers
know that they will be prosecuted, fired, or their careers seriously damaged
for engaging in abusive behavior, the problem will not go away.

