Reforming India’s Policing Culture

Why in News: The custodial death of Ajith Kumar in Tamil Nadu in June 2025 has once again exposed the brutal, outdated policing methods in India.

Two conflicting models of policing: one is Sherlock Holmes, the other is Dirty Harry.

  • Holmes is calm, logical, and evidence-driven. Dirty Harry is aggressive, skips due process, and relies on force and intimidation.

The Culture of Impunity

  • 687 custodial deaths in India between 2018–2023 (avg. 2–3 per week).
  • Top states: Gujarat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu.
  • Many deaths are misreported as suicides or illnesses.
  • Victims mostly from marginalised groups: Dalits, tribals, migrants, daily-wage workers, slum dwellers.
  • Reflects structural injustice, reinforcing caste, class, and power hierarchies.
  • India’s ranking as a “high-risk” country in the Global Torture Index (2025) is a global embarrassment.

What is Custodial Torture?

Definition:

  • Custodial torture is the infliction of physical or mental suffering on individuals held in police or official custody. It is a grave human rights violation and often leads to custodial deaths.

Types of Custodial Torture:

Physical Torture: Beatings, electric shocks, Suffocation, forced stress positions, etc.

Psychological Torture: Threats, humiliation, Sleep deprivation, solitary confinement, etc.

Safeguards Against Custodial Torture

1. Constitutional Provisions

  • Article 14
  • Article 21
  • Article 20(1).
  • Article 20(3)

2. Legal Provisions (Bharatiya Laws, 2023)

  • BNS Section 120: Punishes use of violence to extract confessions or information.
  • BNSS Section 35: Mandates proper procedure and valid reasons for arrest/detention.
  • BSA Section 22: Invalidates confessions made under coercion, threat, or inducement.

3. International Provisions

  • UN Charter (1945): Upholds dignity of prisoners under ICCPR (India is a signatory).
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948): Protects against torture, cruel treatment, and enforced disappearances.

Challenges in Curbing Custodial Torture in India

1. Absence of Specific Anti-Torture Law

  • India signed the UN Convention Against Torture (UNCAT) in 1997 but hasn’t ratified it.
  • No standalone anti-torture law; existing laws (e.g. Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993) are vague and lack stringent penalties.
  • The Law Commission’s 273rd Report (2017) recommending such a law remains unimplemented.

2. Weak Enforcement & Impunity

  • Zero convictions in 345 judicial inquiries (2017–2022) into custodial deaths.
  • Out of 74 cases of torture/illegal detention, only 3 convictions recorded.

3. Institutional and Systemic Failures

  • Human Rights Commissions (NHRC/SHRCs) lack binding powers and depend on state funding.
  • Police Complaints Authorities are missing or ineffective in many states.
  • Prisons are overcrowded (130% capacity), with poor oversight.

4. Inadequate Police Reforms

  • 90% of the police force is constabulary-level with poor training.
  • Pressure for quick results leads to shortcuts and abuse.
  • Lack of infrastructure, forensic support, and reliance on confessions.

5. Social Acceptance & Political Apathy

  • Custodial violence is socially tolerated, especially against Dalits, tribals, and the poor.
  • Non-compliance with D.K. Basu guidelines (e.g. arrest memos, medical checks).

6. Victim Vulnerability & Legal Barriers

  • Victims fear reprisals, lack legal aid, and face threats when filing complaints.

7. Judicial Delays

  • Courts are overburdened, and proceedings are slow.
  • Witness intimidation and delays in magisterial inquiries hinder justice.

Scientific and Legal Case Against Torture

1. Scientifically Ineffective

  • Shane O’Mara’s book Why Torture Doesn’t Work (2015) explains how torture damages brain regions (memory, reasoning), making victims disoriented and unreliable.
  • False confessions are common, as victims say anything to stop the pain.

2. Historical Evidence

  • Algerian War: French torture yielded mostly false or useless intelligence.
  • CIA black sites: Detainees confessed falsely to escape suffering.
  • U.S. Innocence Project: Over 375 wrongful convictions overturned, many due to coerced confessions.

What Works: The PEACE Model and Global Best Practices

1. The PEACE Model (UK, post-1974)

Stands for:

  • Preparation and Planning
  • Engage and Explain
  • Account
  • Closure
  • Evaluation

Focuses on rapport-building, open-ended questioning, and video-recorded interviews.

Resulted in:

  • Fewer false confessions
  • Improved public trust
  • Higher conviction accuracy

Adopted by: Norway, Canada, New Zealand; endorsed by European Committee for the Prevention of Torture.

2. U.S. Evidence

  • High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG): Peer-reviewed studies show non-coercive methods are more effective than torture.
  • Anders Breivik (Norway, 2011): Confessed fully without coercion; provided insights into extremist networks.
  • Najibullah Zazi (U.S., 2009): Cooperated after respectful treatment; helped uncover wider terror networks.

3. Coercive Methods Debunked

  • U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee Report (2014): Confirmed such methods yielded false leads and wasted resources.

Recommendations: Shifting to the Holmes Model

  • India must make a systemic shift from Dirty Harry to Sherlock Holmes.

Immediate Actions:

1. Ratify the UN Convention Against Torture.

2. Enact a standalone anti-torture law.

3. Implement the PEACE model across all States.

4. Embed human rights and scientific interrogation methods into police training.

5. Ensure real-time surveillance of all police custodial actions and zero tolerance for violations.

Conclusion:  “Every custodial beating is not just a wound on a citizen’s body — it is a stain on the soul of the state.”

GS Paper II – Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice and International Relations

Q. “Despite constitutional safeguards and judicial pronouncements, custodial torture remains a grim reality in India. Critically examine the reasons and suggest reforms to curb it.

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