Saturday, August 27, 2011

"KOLLOLINI" Kolkata - Tourist spot

History of Kolkata Police, Paschimbanga

The Kolkata Police has the task of policing the metropolitan area of Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), India, as defined under the Calcutta Police Act, 1866 and the Calcutta Suburban Police Act, 1866.


The history of the present structure of policing in Kolkata goes back to colonial times, when the city was known as "CALCUTTA", and was a fledging settlement of the English East India Company. Calcutta was founded by an Englishman, Job Charnock, who was then a key functionary of the Company, had anchored his boat Maddapollam at a village called Sutanuti on the eastern banks of the Hooghly, in 1690. This formed the nucleus of a fortified military settlement which in 1696 (3 years after Charnock's death) along with the villages of Gobindapur and Kalikata, became a prime location for the East India Company's operations in Bengal.
Policing in Calcutta's earliest days was confined to the Mughal administration and their local representatives. Bengal was still technically a part of the Mughal Empire, but the Nawabs of Bengal, based in Murshidabad in North Bengal, were its effective rulers. The Watch and Ward functions were entrusted to a "Kotwal" or town prefect who had 45 peons under him, armed with traditional weapons like staves and spears, to deal with miscreants. In 1720, the East India Company formally appointed an officer to be in charge of civil and criminal administration. He was assisted by an Indian functionary commonly known as "black deputy" or "black zamindar". Under him were three “Naib-dewans”, one of whom was in charge of the police. The settlement was divided into "Thanas" (Police stations) under "Thanadars" who had in turn contingents of "Naiks" and "Paiks". A small contingent of river police was also formed in the same time.
A statute passed in the year 1778 raised the strength of the police in Calcutta to 700 paiks, 31 thanadars and 34 naibs under a superintendent. In 1780 commissioners of conservancy were appointed for the town who also ooked after watch and ward. Policing was still very loosely organized.
In 1794 justices of peace were appointed for the municipal administration of Calcutta and its suburbs, under a chief magistrate who was directly in charge of the Police. In 1806 justices of peace were constituted as magistrates of 24 Parganas and parts of the adjacent districts within a 20-mile radius of the town.
The middle decades of the 19th century witnessed a greater systematization and institutionalization of policing in Calcutta. William Coats Blacquiere, a charismatic city magistrate inaugurated a network of spies or "Goendas". In 1845 a committee under J.H.Patton brought about key changes in police organization which now began to be modeled on the London Metropolitan Police. A Commissioner of Police was appointed with powers of a justice of peace to preserve law and order, detect crime and apprehend offenders.
In 1856 the Governor-General promulgated an Act treating Calcutta Police as a separate organization and S.Wauchope, who was then the chief magistrate of Calcutta, was appointed as the first Commissioner of Police.
He had to face difficult days because of the First War of Independence of 1857, the first upsurge against British rule. He handled the situation ably and was knighted for his achievement. During the incumbency of his successor V.H. Schalch the Calcutta Police Act and the Calcutta Suburban Police Act, which are still in force, were enacted in 1866. Two years earlier (1864) the Commissioner of Police had become the Chairman of the Justices as well and a Deputy Commissioner was appointed to look after the executive police.
It was Sir Stuart Hogg who first set up the Detective Department in Calcutta Police in November 1868 with A.Younan as the superintendent and R.Lamb as the first-class inspector. Hogg was both the Commissioner of Police and the Chairman of the Calcutta Municipal Corporation. His name is still remembered in the Hogg Market, more popularly known as the New Market, one of the landmarks of the city of Kolkata. Sir Fredrick Halliday, who was appointed as the Commissioner of Police in 1906, also introduced several changes in the administration of Calcutta Police including the system of running a Control Room. His biggest achievement was the creation of the Special Branch in June 1909. For his numerous contributions to the growth of the city police, he may rightly be called the father of modern Calcutta Police. During his tenure Calcutta Police was divided into three town divisions and two suburban divisions.
Another person who deserves mention is Sir Charles Augustus Tegart, who headed the Detective Department and virtually controlled the Special Branch since his joining Calcutta Police in 1902. He was the first officer of the Indian Police (IP) in the organization and on his report the Special Branch was created. He reorganized the city police force and made it efficient. A highly decorated officer, he was the Commissioner of Police in the years 1923-31 and was admired for keeping the city free from crime. However, he was unpopular with freedom fightersand his encounters with revolutionaries are a part of popular Bengali folklore. Worth mentioning here are the names of three more Bengalees named Ramgati Banerjee, Sukumar Sengupta and one Zakir Hussain who, for the first time in the Indian history, topped the written examination for the coveted job of Imperial Police (IP) Officers, in 1920. During the Salt movement, The Calcutta Police was controlled by Charles Tegart as Police Commissioner, Ramgati Banerjee as DC(South) and Sukumar Sengupta as DC(North). Later, Ramgati Banerjee left the job and took up teaching as profession, Zakir Hussain left job also to join as First Governor-General of East Pakistan and Sukumar Sengupta continued in the job to become the first Bengalee Inspector General of Police, West Bengal soon after independence.
It may be remembered that the history of Calcutta Police under British rule was an adjunct of the colonial administration. Hence its role was primarily repressive and anti-nationalist. After India gained independence from British rule in 1947, Calcutta Police was re-organised as an arm of a newly emerged nation-state keen on consolidating its freedom. Surendra Nath Chatterjee was the first Indian Commissioner of Police.

The logo: -
Each symbol of the Kolkata Police seal has a special significance.
At the center is the Ashok Stambha, which has been adopted from Ashoka's Sarnath Lion Capital.
The 24-spoked wheel is referred to as the Dharmachakra. Dharma or Religion is the manifestation of the inner conscience and as Swami Vivekananda said: "Religion is the manifestation of the divinity already in man".
Below the Dharmachakra is inscribed Satyameva Jayate which signifies that Truth always prevails.
In between the two circles, which encircle the Ashok Stambha, is the symbolic peacock, which is the national bird. The seal signifies upholding Truth, Valour and Justice. "We who enforce the law must not merely obey it. We have an obligation to set a moral example, which those whom we protect can follow."

Structure: -
At present Kolkata Police has 5 divisions covering 48 Police Stations. It has a strength of approximately 26,000 and a territorial jurisdiction of 185.0sq km**. There are 8 battalions of Armed Police well as specialized branches like the Detective Department, Special Branch, Reserve Force, Traffic Police, Enforcement Branch, Wireless Branch and Security Control Organization. The force is also incorporating Information Technology in a big way - a computer network connects all Divisions, Police Stations and Battalions and there is a separate Computer Section as well. Kolkata Police has thus evolved from a colonial force into a developmental and stability-oriented component of executive governance. It is an integral part of the vision of a free and fair society, which forms the basis of modern India Kolkata Police is an organization with a complex command structure that reflects the diverse range of tasks it is expected to undertake. The administration of the Kolkata Police Force is vested in the Commissioner of Police. The members of the Kolkata Police force, under the general supervision of the Commissioner of Police, are attached to one of the following units:
1) Headquarters Force
2) Detective Department
3) Special Branch
4) Home Guard
5) Mounted Police
6) Special Branch
7) Enforcement Branch
8) Traffic Police
9) Reserve Force
10) Wireless Branch
11) Security Control
12) Armed Police
13) Special Task Force
14) Combat Battalion

Also the organisation has been separated in some divisions:
1) North and North Suburban division
2) South and South Suburban division
3) South East Suburban division
4) Central division
5) Port division
6) Eastern Suburban division

Despite that Kolkata Police have some special forces
1) The Rapid Action force (RAF)
2) Special Action Force (SAF) with approximately 160 combat personnel
3) Commando Force with approximately 200 personnel
4) Kolkata Armed Police (KAP) - 8 Armed Battalion


Rank structure (in descending order of seniority):
Commissioner of Police
(One) Special Commissioners of Police
(Three) Additional Commissioners of Police
(Three) Special Additional Commissioners of Police
(Five) Joint Commissioners of Police
Deputy Commissioners of Police
Assistant Commissioners of Police
Inspectors
Sergeant/Sub-Inspector/Wireless Supervisor
Assistant Sub-Inspector
Naik
Constable/Sepoy
Wireless Helper

Jurisdiction: -
The jurisdiction of the Kolkata Police covers the area of Kolkata District and an adjacent area as well. That adjacent area, like Kolkata District, is within the boundaries of the Kolkata Municipal Corporation. The Kolkata Police's entire area comprises eighty-six wards of the KMC in their entirety, plus most of another six KMC wards. But it does not cover the entire KMC area.


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