Current Affairs31 Jul, 2025The HinduIndia’s police must ...
GS 2: GovernanceEthics

India’s police must get out of Dirty Harry’s shadow, Pg 10.

The custodial death of Ajith Kumar in Tamil Nadu revives debate over police torture and highlights the urgent need for systemic reforms in India’s policing practices.

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Key Highlights:

  • Ajith Kumar, a 27-year-old temple guard, died in police custody in June 2025 despite prior reform recommendations.
  • 687 custodial deaths recorded in India between 2018–23; highest in Gujarat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, UP, WB, and TN.
  • Torture disproportionately targets vulnerable sections — Dalits, tribals, migrants, and urban poor.
  • India is ranked a “high-risk” country in the 2025 Global Torture Index.
  • Supreme Court rulings (D.K. Basu, 1996; Puttaswamy, 2017) have reinforced safeguards, yet torture remains widespread.
  • India has not ratified the UN Convention Against Torture; no standalone anti-torture law exists.

Detailed Insights:

  • Torture reflects structural injustice, rooted in caste and class hierarchies, poor police training, and performance pressure.
  • Institutional impunity prevails: low conviction rates, minimal oversight, and societal tolerance normalize violence.
  • Scientific studies debunk torture’s utility: Shane O’Mara’s neuroscience research shows torture impairs memory and cognition.
  • False confessions under torture undermine justice, as seen in CIA “black sites” and historical cases like Birmingham Six.
  • Successful global models include the U.K.’s PEACE model (Preparation, Engage, Account, Closure, Evaluation) that builds rapport and improves outcomes.
  • Evidence-based policing is more effective: the lead to Osama bin Laden came through surveillance, not coercion.
  • Countries like Norway, Canada, New Zealand use non-coercive methods with high success and public trust.

Concepts Involved:

  • PEACE Model: A structured non-coercive interrogation technique focusing on open-ended questioning and rapport-building.
  • Prefrontal Cortex & Hippocampus: Brain regions crucial for memory, impaired under torture.
  • UN Convention Against Torture (UNCAT): International treaty aimed at preventing torture and inhumane treatment.
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