Journalism of Courage
Advertisement
Premium

20 encounters in 7 months, all during recovery ops, put Punjab Police under scanner

This year, five suspects have died and 17 injured in shootouts allegedly while they were trying to run away or had fired at the police when taken to sites to recover weapons, drugs

This year, at least 19 such encounters have taken place in the state. (Representative Image/File)This year, at least 19 such encounters have taken place in the state. (Representative Image/File)

On July 11, one Ramandeep Singh, an accused in the May 25 Dhilwan toll plaza firing case, was shot in the leg while attempting to escape police custody during a weapon recovery operation in Kapurthala. SSP Gaurav Toora said police fired after Ramandeep allegedly ignored several warnings.

Prior to that, on July 8, less than an hour after declaring that two men had been arrested in connection with the murder of Abohar businessman Sanjay Verma, the Punjab Police said that the suspects were killed in an encounter outside the city where they were taken to recover the weapons and clothes they had allegedly thrown after the crime.

The two incidents are the latest in a series of similar encounters in Punjab over the last few years, where police officials escorting the handcuffed accused to ‘recovery sites’ are caught in shootouts, resulting in the alleged criminals being injured or killed.

According to the police, some suspects retrieve concealed arms at the recovery site and open fire, while others snatch weapons from the escorting officers and attack them. While most accused survive the retaliatory police fire with gunshot wounds — typically to the leg or foot — some have died. This year, at least 20 such encounters have taken place in the state in which five suspects were killed and 17 injured.
In Abohar, Verma, popularly known as Punjab’s ‘Kurta Pajama King’, was shot dead on July 7 morning by three men waiting outside his shop. A day later, Jaspreet Singh and Ram Rattan were arrested for allegedly helping the shooters escape. “When the police took them to the location, their accomplices were waiting at the spot, and they started firing at the police. The police fired in self-defence and the suspects were killed. One of our senior constables was injured,” the police said. Later, police FIR suggested that the both were killed with the bullets fired by their accomplices.

After the incident, Cabinet minister and Aam Aadmi Party state president Aman Arora posted on X, “In New Punjab, criminals have two choices: surrender or face the law. In the Abohar murder case…2 gangsters neutralised in an encounter. No mercy for those who dare to disrupt peace.”

This “new Punjab”, however, is over a year and a half old, as the state has been witnessing such police encounters since December 2023 — a month that saw seven such incidents. The trend continued throughout 2024, with murder suspect Gursharan Singh killed and gangster Karanjit Singh alias Jassa Happowal, accused Suraj Mandi, and wanted criminal Sunil Baba among those injured.

Social activist Harmilap Grewal questioned the glorification of such encounters, saying the incidents “raised many questions”.

Story continues below this ad

“Is there a lack of training for the police that the same script is being repeated all over Punjab? Rather than reprimanding and taking action on the escorting police party for negligence, they are encouraging them and making such officers heroes,” he alleged.

“Such encounters are no deterrence to crime in the state. Big conspirators are sitting in jail. Police should bring them on remand. Police kill the shooters, and gangsters in jails nurture new ones…it will not affect the gangsters from making money from jail, as there is no signal that the encounters have been discouraging new recruits,” Grewal added.

In the Sanjay Verma case, his brother, Jagat Verma, pointed out that such encounters were being reported at a time when the ‘real conspirators’ have been orchestrating murders from inside jails.

In Verma’s case too, an alleged gangster uploaded a post on social media, claiming responsibility for the murder.

Story continues below this ad

While no senior police officer agreed to comment on recurrence of such encounters, saying they were not authorised to speak, Director General of Police (DGP) Gaurav Yadav had earlier said that the police aim to work within the parameters of law, carry out professional investigations, and get the accused punished through the courts. “(But) When we face any firing, then we retaliate in self-defence. Bullet for bullet is not an aggressive policy. It is a policy of self-defence. If police is attacked, police will respond,” he had told media. Gurinder Dhillon, who retired as an additional director general of police, said it was “deeply shameful” that the government and state police, “instead of addressing their failures, are being seen as resorting to extra-legal actions”.

“No matter the provocation, this cannot be allowed. Punjab cannot afford a slide back into the dark days of the 1980s. There are hostile neighbouring enemy forces waiting to exploit such chaos and manufacture a serious internal security crisis,” Dhillon, now a Congress leader, said in a post X.

Asked about the encounters during weapons recovery, Anandpur Sahib MP Malwinder Singh Kang, who is also the AAP’s spokesperson, said, “I feel that we should trust the criminal justice system.”

“We should not connect the encounters with politics. We have a law, we have a judicial system, we have a system to investigate a crime. We should trust that system. If anybody adopts extrajudicial methods, then ultimately the impact will be bad,” he added.

Story continues below this ad

On what the ruling party and the government thinks about such encounters, Kang said, “Feedback must be reaching the ears of the party’s and government’s representatives. We all are part of society. They must be thinking about it”.

2025 police encounters

Tags:
  • encounter
Edition
Install the Express App for
a better experience
Featured
Trending Topics
News
Multimedia
Follow Us
C Raja Mohan writesOn its 80th birthday, and after Trump, a question: Whose UN is it anyway?
X