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Brain, not just brawn

Terrorist attacks, cyber strikes, white collar swindles or organized syndicates ? new-age crime has come to stay in India.

Published on: Jun 15, 2006 02:02 AM IST
None | By , New Delhi
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Terrorist attacks, cyber strikes, white collar swindles or organized syndicates — new-age crime has come to stay in India. And to ensure that our lawkeepers get the much-needed R&D muscle to outsmart criminals, the Union home ministry has directed the police forces of all states and central police organisations to put "institutionalised mechanisms" in place for research and development (R&D).

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HT Image

The ministry's whip does not come a day sooner. The Indian police force, with 22 lakh personnel, spent a little over Rs 1 crore of its annual budget of Rs 25,000 crore on research and development (R&D) in 2005-06. The defence forces, on the other hand, spent Rs 2,804 crore.

The home ministry is emphatic that the police need to invest more on research with a focus on terrorism, Naxal violence, organised, white collar and cyber crime. "In view of the changing security situation, both internally and at the international level, the police need to upgrade their functioning in terms of better technology and equipment,'' a senior ministry official said. As of now, most research on police operations is left to the Bureau of Police Research and Development (BPR&D) with the central and state police being nowhere in the picture.

Initially, the home ministry will provide a minimum amount of Rs 50 lakh to all police units --- the force in each state as well as the BSF, CRPF and the like --- under the Police Modernisation Fund during financial year 2006-07 for research and development.

 
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