“Suspend cops who refuse to register complaint”

January 06, 2013 11:37 am | Updated November 17, 2021 06:52 am IST - New Delhi

Union Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde with Home Secretary, R. K. Singh, during the Conference of Chief Secretaries and Director Generals of Police to Prevent and Combat Crimes Against Women and Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in New Delhi on January 04, 2013. Photo: V. Sudershan

Union Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde with Home Secretary, R. K. Singh, during the Conference of Chief Secretaries and Director Generals of Police to Prevent and Combat Crimes Against Women and Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in New Delhi on January 04, 2013. Photo: V. Sudershan

A policeman should be suspended immediately if he refuses to register a complaint, Union Home Secretary R.K. Singh has suggested.

“There should not be any hesitation in suspending any policeman who refuses to register a complaint. That is in law. Not registering any complaint is violation of law,” he said.

According to Mr. Singh, people face ordeal in every step while going to a police station for registering any case as well as trying to know the status of their complaint.

“That has to be changed. For the women, weaker sections or the poor, visiting a police station itself is an ordeal. To know the status of any compliant, without taking the local MLA along, it is impossible,” he said.

The Home Secretary said an atmosphere should be created where women and weaker sections of the society get the ability to register a complaint without facing difficulty.

He said in cases such as molestation, the very thought of going through the ordeal to brief the policemen about the incident dissuade many to go to a police station and that has to be changed.

“It is high time, as a country we have to woke up. Our inability to protect women and weaker sections of the society is a huge, huge problem,” he told the country’s top police brass at a conference here on Friday.

The conference was convened in the wake of the brutal gang-rape and assault of a 23-year-old girl in Delhi.

The Home Secretary said the government has taken some steps but that was not enough as there should be change in people’s attitude.

“We have to educate people to respect women, SCs, STs. We have to address the problem through social messaging, curriculum, through education.

“Beginning has to be made. We have to build infrastructure for women’s safety. We have to ensure dignity of life.”

Mr. Singh said investigation of any case has to be time-bound and, according to CrPC, it has to be completed in three months.

He said the Home Ministry has taken the initiative to set up fast-track courts across the country to deal with cases of crime against women and weaker sections of the society.

“Justice delayed is justice denied. This is the biggest problem. If the case is delayed, witnesses are not coming forward and there are many more problems. We have to get the trial start quickly,” the home secretary said.

He said every police officer should be responsible, responsive and there should be change of attitude of police and policing. “Investigation has to be sensitive,” he said.

Mr. Singh also asked all state governments to increase the number of women in police forces to 33 per cent.

Noting that women comprised just 3.98 per cent of the country’s total police forces, he told the DGPs, “If there is women police, women complainants will feel more secure, comfortable in visiting a police station. We think 33 per cent civil police — constables and sub-inspectors should be women.

“We have suggested to the Delhi Police to increase the number of women personnel and we suggest you all to do the needful to achieve this target.”

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