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The politics of police encounters: Maharashtra’s troubling legacy

While the encounter policy had a positive impact on law and order, it raised serious questions about legality and ethics. For decades, governments have used police encounters as a political tool to showcase swift action against crime.

January 21, 2025 / 16:44 IST
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Following Mumbai’s example, other states such as Karnataka, West Bengal, and Gujarat also adopted encounter strategies to curb crime.
Following Mumbai’s example, other states such as Karnataka, West Bengal, and Gujarat also adopted encounter strategies to curb crime.

For decades, governments have used police encounters as a political tool to showcase swift action against crime. Whenever opposition parties or media criticise ruling governments for deteriorating law and order, a spate of police encounters often follows. A similar case unfolded in Maharashtra just before the state assembly elections, which has now put the state’s ruling coalition in a tough spot. Five Maharashtra police personnel are set to face prison time for their involvement in a fake encounter.

In August last year, Akshay Shinde, accused of sexually assaulting a minor girl in Badlapur, was killed in an encounter by the Navi Mumbai police. However, a magistrate inquiry later revealed that the encounter was staged. All police personnel involved in the incident were found guilty of orchestrating a fake encounter and are now facing murder charges. The assault of the minor had become a political flashpoint, and when Shinde was killed in the encounter, ruling parties attempted to capitalise on the incident for political gain. Banners featuring Home Ministry head Devendra Fadnavis holding a revolver were put up in various locations.

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This is not the first time that governments have employed the unofficial policy of police encounters, a practice that often proves to be a double-edged sword.

The rise of encounters in Maharashtra