Apolitical policing
Apolitical policing
Syed Kaleem Imam
Articles

THERE was a time when even an ASP-rank officer could be entrusted with a challenging investigation and be expected to deliver while remaining professional, unbiased, and uninfluenced by partisanship. Today, the credibility of even high-level committees and commissions is often suspect.

The ever-increasing crime rate and the erosion of professionalism in the police have affected nearly all of us at some point or the other. We have gradually reached staggering levels of inefficiency as politics has crept into officialdom and civil servants have been wooed into politics.

Our politicians’ adoption of the colonial model — using the police administration to subjugate their own people — is the worst form of tyranny. Regrettably, some civil servants actively seek to become a part of such oppressive systems. It is now almost a given that important police posts will be shuffled whenever there is a change on the political front. It pays, therefore, to be in political leaders’ good books when they are making the transfers and appointments. Neutrality and professionalism are rarely the desired qualities when such appointments are being made.

These politicians then push for quick fixes and instant results, which has made our police force gung-ho and trigger-happy. There was a time when lawbreakers would give up when surrounded by police. They would take their chances in court. Now, they opt to resist, retaliate to kill, or even die in the course of action. Even one-time offenders now run or react violently when encircled out of the fear that they may be subjected to some extrajudicial action.

Politicians push for quick fixes and instant results, which has made our police force gung-ho and trigger-happy.

A decade ago, there used to be an inquiry after every police encounter. Now, the victims are just described as collateral damage and ‘it happens’ is the go-to explanation for police excesses that should be punished as severely as possible. This represents a complete breakdown of the basic tenets of law enforcement.

The systematic undermining of the police chief’s authority is another major problem. As a former inspector general, I can attest that there is no security of tenure or operational autonomy, despite court orders guaranteeing it. Rub someone powerful the wrong way, and you can expect a quick transfer out.

The highest court of the land can haul you up for a public beat down for systemic failures that you cannot fix alone. Dealing with prime ministers and chief ministers who love to play cop is another headache. They think they know policing better than anyone but enjoy zero liability for the damage their routine interference in police operations ends up causing.

I have often reasoned with our rulers that the rule of law, good governance and an apolitical police force will not only help them when they are in power, but will also protect them when they are not. A sound system can never allow the kind of political witch-hunt every change of government now seems to bring. However, our leaders have so far failed to see that the opportunists they favour are invariably the first to switch sides. Any person ready to break the law for one politician won’t mind doing the same for another. Secondly, it is important to publicise openings in police posts at all levels and let the National Public Safety Commission or another independent committee select the best person for the job. The prevailing system of appointment has clearly cracked and needs to be replaced. There should be set selection criteria for each position based on the job description and organisational mandate. The pressure to adhere to the recommendations of various interest groups needs to be put to an end.