Why the
Indian Police Is Often Viewed as Brutal, Corrupt, Communal, Casteist, and
Violative of Human Rights
SR
Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd)
Introduction
The police constitute one of the most visible
institutions of the modern state. In a democratic society, the police are
expected to protect citizens, maintain law and order, prevent crime, and uphold
constitutional values. Ideally, they should function as impartial guardians of
justice and defenders of human rights. In India, however, the police system has
frequently been criticized for brutality, corruption, caste prejudice, communal
bias, authoritarian conduct, and violations of civil liberties. Reports of
custodial torture, fake encounters, unlawful arrests, suppression of dissent,
and discriminatory treatment toward marginalized communities regularly appear
in public discourse. Human rights organizations, judicial commissions,
journalists, and civil society activists have repeatedly raised concerns
regarding the functioning of the Indian police system.
At the same time, it must also be acknowledged
that the Indian police force operates under extremely difficult conditions.
Police personnel often face long working hours, inadequate infrastructure,
political pressure, shortage of manpower, stressful environments, and public
hostility. Therefore, the problem cannot be reduced merely to the moral failure
of individual police officers. Rather, it is rooted in historical, structural,
political, and social factors that have shaped policing in India over a long period.
The nature of Indian policing can be
understood only by examining the colonial origins of the police system, the
hierarchical structure of Indian society, political interference, institutional
weaknesses, inadequate accountability, and the growing authoritarian tendencies
within governance. The crisis of policing in India reflects not only the
failure of institutions but also the contradictions of Indian democracy itself.
Colonial
Origins of the Indian Police System
The modern Indian police system emerged during
British colonial rule. After this, the British Crown
reorganized the administration to strengthen control over the Indian population,
the most important legal foundation of policing became the Indian Police Act-1861. This Act established a centralized and militarized police
structure designed primarily to protect colonial authority rather than serve
the people.
The colonial police were not accountable to
citizens. Their primary role was to suppress political dissent, control the
population, collect intelligence, and maintain imperial order. Brutality and
coercion were institutionalized as legitimate tools of governance. The
relationship between the police and the public became one of fear rather than
trust.
After independence in 1947, India adopted a
democratic Constitution guaranteeing fundamental rights, equality before law,
and civil liberties. However, the colonial structure of policing remained
largely unchanged. The police continued to function with a command-and-control
mentality inherited from colonial rule. While the political rulers changed, the
institutional culture of domination survived. Consequently, many scholars argue
that India achieved political independence without fundamentally democratizing
its police system.
Social
Structure and the Influence of Caste and Communalism
The Indian police do not function in a social
vacuum. Police personnel are recruited from the same society that is deeply
shaped by caste hierarchy, patriarchy, class inequality, and communal
divisions. Therefore, social prejudices frequently influence policing
practices.
Caste Bias
in Policing
One of the major criticisms against Indian
policing is the discriminatory treatment of Dalits, Adivasis, and other
marginalized communities. Numerous studies and reports suggest that members of
oppressed castes often face humiliation, refusal of police assistance, delayed
registration of complaints, custodial violence, and biased investigations. In
many cases involving caste atrocities, the police have been accused of siding
with dominant caste groups.
The implementation of the laws has frequently
exposed institutional bias. Victims often report that police officers
discourage them from filing cases or dilute charges against powerful accused
persons. This weakens the confidence of marginalized communities in the justice
system.
The roots of caste bias lie in the broader
social order. Since Indian society historically normalized caste hierarchy and
untouchability, such attitudes often become embedded within state institutions.
Police prejudice is therefore not merely personal but structural and social.
Communal
Bias and Majoritarian Tendencies
Communal polarization has increasingly
affected Indian politics and society. In several instances of communal riots
and religious violence, allegations have emerged that the police acted in a
partisan manner. Minority communities, especially Muslims, have often accused
the police of selective arrests, biased investigations, and failure to protect
victims during communal violence.
Various inquiry commissions investigating
riots in different parts of India have pointed toward administrative failure
and, at times, deliberate police complicity. Critics argue that when political
discourse becomes majoritarian, state institutions including the police may
absorb and reflect such ideological tendencies.
Communal policing damages secular democracy
because it undermines the principle of equal citizenship. When citizens
perceive the police as aligned with one religious community or political
ideology, public trust in the rule of law weakens significantly.
Political
Interference and the Politicization of the Police
One of the most serious problems affecting
Indian policing is political interference. Ideally, the police should function
independently and impartially according to constitutional principles. In
practice, however, politicians frequently influence transfers, postings,
promotions, and investigations.
This political control creates a culture of
loyalty to ruling governments rather than loyalty to law. Police officers may
feel pressured to:
Suppress
political opposition, harass critics, manipulate investigations, ignore crimes
committed by influential persons or act selectively during elections and
protests.
The misuse of police power for political
purposes weakens democratic institutions and encourages authoritarian
governance. In many cases, the police become instruments of state power rather
than protectors of citizens’ rights.
Recognizing this problem, the Supreme Court of
India in the landmark Prakash Singh judgment of 2006 ordered major
police reforms. The Court recommended fixed tenure for senior officers,
establishment of independent police complaints authorities, and measures to
reduce political interference. However, implementation of these reforms has
remained incomplete in many states due to lack of political will.
Brutality,
Torture, and “Third Degree” Methods
Police brutality remains one of the gravest
concerns in India. Custodial torture, illegal detention, forced confessions,
and encounter killings continue despite constitutional protections and judicial
guidelines.
The use of “third degree” methods has become
normalized in many police stations. Several factors contribute to this
phenomenon:
Pressure to
solve cases quickly, shortage of scientific investigative tools, poor forensic
infrastructure, low conviction rates and a culture that rewards results rather
than legality.
Instead of relying on professional
investigation and evidence collection, some officers resort to coercion and
violence. Torture is often used to extract confessions or intimidate suspects.
Victims are frequently poor, socially marginalized, or politically powerless.
The persistence of custodial violence reflects
institutional impunity. Prosecution of police personnel accused of torture is
rare, and internal inquiries often lack independence. Fear of retaliation
discourages victims from seeking justice.
India has signed the United Nations Convention
Against Torture but has not fully incorporated anti-torture safeguards into
domestic law. Human rights activists therefore continue to demand stronger
legal protection against custodial abuse.
Corruption
in the Police System
Corruption is another major issue affecting
Indian policing. Bribery, extortion, manipulation of investigations, and
collusion with criminal networks are widely reported. Corruption emerges from
several interconnected factors:
Political
patronage, weak accountability, low transparency, social acceptance of bribery and
economic incentives within the system.
Corruption may influence:
Registration
of First Information Reports (FIRs), criminal investigations, traffic
enforcement, land disputes, recruitment and postings and protection of illegal
businesses.
In some cases, postings to lucrative positions
become part of informal political-economic networks. Officers may then seek to
recover money through illegal means. Such corruption destroys public trust and
weakens the rule of law.
Weak
Accountability Mechanisms
A democratic police system requires strong
accountability. However, mechanisms to monitor police misconduct in India are
often weak and ineffective.
Internal departmental inquiries frequently
lack independence. Victims of police abuse may hesitate to file complaints due
to fear of retaliation. Judicial processes are slow and expensive. Political
protection often shields powerful officers from punishment.
Although institutions such as human rights
commissions and courts occasionally intervene, their capacity to ensure
consistent accountability remains limited. As a result, a culture of impunity
develops in which illegal actions go unpunished.
The absence of effective accountability
encourages authoritarian tendencies and undermines constitutional governance.
Poor
Working Conditions and Institutional Stress
Ironically, police personnel themselves often
work under extremely difficult conditions. Many officers face:
Excessively
long working hours, lack of weekly leave, inadequate housing, psychological
stress, shortage of staff and poor infrastructure.
Constables at lower levels often experience
harsh hierarchical treatment within the police organization itself. Such
stressful conditions can produce frustration, aggression, and insensitivity
toward the public.
Training systems also remain inadequate in
many areas. Police academies traditionally emphasize discipline, obedience, and
crowd control more than human rights, constitutional morality, gender
sensitivity, or community engagement. Consequently, democratic policing culture
develops slowly.
Militarization
and Authoritarian Governance
In regions affected by insurgency, separatist
movements, terrorism, or communal tension, policing often becomes militarized.
Special security laws and extraordinary powers may expand state authority while
weakening civil liberties.
When internal security is treated as warfare,
citizens may increasingly be viewed as potential threats rather than
rights-bearing individuals. Preventive detention, surveillance, arbitrary
arrests, and excessive force then become normalized.
Authoritarian political cultures further
strengthen this tendency. Governments emphasizing nationalism, internal
enemies, and strong-state ideology may encourage aggressive policing practices.
Suppression of dissent, protests, and civil society activism then becomes
easier to justify in the name of national security or public order.
Public
Attitudes and the Acceptance of Police Violence
An important but often ignored factor is
public support for authoritarian policing. Many citizens criticize police
corruption and brutality but simultaneously demand instant justice and harsh
punishment for accused persons. Media narratives often glorify encounter
killings and aggressive policing as symbols of strength and efficiency.
This social approval creates pressure on the
police to demonstrate toughness rather than legality. In such an environment,
constitutional rights may appear secondary to demands for order and punishment.
Therefore, police authoritarianism is not only
a state problem but also partly a reflection of broader social attitudes.
Impact on
Democracy and Human Rights
The consequences of biased and authoritarian
policing are extremely serious for democracy. When the police become communal,
casteist, corrupt, or politically partisan:
Rule of law
weakens, marginalized communities lose faith in the state, dissent becomes
criminalized, civil liberties shrink and democratic institutions become
fragile.
Fear gradually replaces citizenship. Instead
of being viewed as protectors, police come to be seen as instruments of
coercion and domination.
A democratic society cannot survive merely
through elections. It also requires institutions committed to constitutional
morality, equality, and human dignity. Police reform is therefore essential for
the preservation of democracy itself.
Conclusion
The problems associated with Indian policing
are deeply rooted in history, politics, and society. The colonial legacy of
authoritarian control, caste hierarchy, communal polarization, political
interference, weak accountability, corruption, and institutional stress have
collectively shaped a police system that often appears brutal and undemocratic.
At the same time, reform is possible. Genuine
democratization of policing would require:
Insulation
from political interference, independent accountability mechanisms, stronger
human rights safeguards, better training, improved working conditions, diversity
in recruitment, scientific investigation methods and greater public oversight.
Ultimately, the police reflect the nature of
the society and state they serve. A humane, democratic, and constitutional
police system can emerge only when democratic values are strengthened
throughout society itself.