Damned if he does, damned if he doesn’t : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Damned if he does, damned if he doesn’t

A cop is the symbol of governmental authority. August Vollmer, the father of American policing, remarked, ‘He is supposed to possess the qualifications of a soldier, lawyer, diplomat and an educator. He is condemned when he enforces law, dismissed when he does not.’

Damned if he does, damned if he doesn’t


VK Kapoor 

A cop is the symbol of governmental authority. August Vollmer, the father of American policing,  remarked, ‘He is supposed to possess the qualifications of a soldier, lawyer, diplomat and an educator. He is condemned when he enforces law, dismissed when he does not.’ 

I served the department for 38 long years, and trained the Delhi Police for the Commonwealth Games. I had a close professional and personal interaction with all ranks.

The life of a policeman at the ground level is a gritty struggle for survival, hard work, uncomfortable personal life, pressure and want. The ‘at work’ world of a police officer is negative. He sees the bad part of society — the criminal, the abuser of rules; ordinary people at their worst. A research reveals that a cop dies 11 years earlier because of the stress and strains of the job. 

Studies have called police work a ‘high-risk lifestyle’. Not high risk in terms of the physical dangers of the job, but in developing attitudinal, behavioural and relationship problems. It is a progression from idealism to despair. During my interaction with the Delhi Police, I found high rate of physical illness, alcoholism, various family and psychological problems, including suicide. A policeman is always facing scrutiny from the community, from peers, superiors and subordinates. Everyone looks to him to take charge or solve a problem. He is never off duty. 

The relationship between a politician and a policeman is complicated. The former wants complete control of the department. I remember a senior minister wanting an SHO of his choice in a particular police station. I told him that the man was a scoundrel. He replied: ‘Maine isse puja-path nahin karwana. Teen-char bande marwane hain (I don’t want him for prayers, I have to get three-four people killed).’ Police bosses became willing tools. At the senior level, hypocrisy is at a premium; sycophancy  and deviousness the norm.

The recent incident of misconduct with a Delhi cop garnered a lot of support for the police. What is needed is for the police to adopt a humane approach. People skills are important. Primitive emotional response still holds the key to survival. 

A cop should get respect and dignity due to him. He is an important and useful segment of society. He should not be used, misused or abused.

Top News

Excise 'scam': Delhi court extends CM Arvind Kejriwal's judicial custody till May 20

Excise ‘scam’: Delhi court extends judicial custody of Arvind Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia, K Kavitha

Special judge for CBI and ED matters Kaveri Baweja extends K...

Glorification of violence should not be part of any civilised society, India tells Canada

Glorification of violence should not be part of any civilised society, India tells Canada

Calls upon the Justin Trudeau government to stop providing c...

Resume work as IAS officer, Punjab tells BJP’s Bathinda candidate Parampal Kaur

Resume work as IAS officer, Punjab tells BJP’s Bathinda candidate Parampal Kaur

Refuses to accept IAS officer’s resignation

3 Independent MLAs withdraw support, BJP govt reduced to minority in Haryana

3 Independent MLAs withdraw support, BJP govt reduced to minority in Haryana

The government which has the support of two other Independen...


Cities

View All