
For the first time in the last 26 days, 55-year-old C.P. Sharma can get back to his 9-to-5 routine and spend time with his family in Jaipur, away from the scorching heat of Pilupura, where he handled a bunch of Gurjjars on short fuse, ready to blow up any moment.
Sharma, superintendent of police of the state Crime Record Bureau, was the official negotiator from the government. He was seen as Raje8217;s emissary8212;not the best credentials when you are with a group of hostile Gurjjars.
When Sharma entered the Gurjjar camp in Pilupura on May 25, they were in no mood to talk8212;they had 12 bodies lined up at Pilupura. Even when Raje called Bainsala 8220;unreasonable and one-sided8221;, dimming any hopes of a breakthrough, Sharma kept working to come up with a solution. It took him at least two weeks to make the first talks8212;held on June 98212;possible.
Sharma played the negotiator even in 2006, when he was SP Dausa, when Gurjjars first turned violent demanding reservation. He was SP SOG in 2007 when violence broke again. This time too, soon after the government felt things were going out of hand, Sharma was called for help.
That was May 25, two days after the violence on the Pilupura railway track. Since then, Sharma has been at Pilupura, sitting close to Bainsala. Dressed in a gray safari suit, leather sandals and sunglasses, Sharma shares meals with the Gurjjars, even cracking jokes. For 26 days, Sharma cajoled the Gurjjars even as he doggedly stuck to his stand.
8220;You can not handle every situation with bullets, sometimes you need a human touch,8221; said Sharma.
His strong interest in human psychology might have helped Sharma to bring the Gurjjars to the talks table, but he has never pursued the subject academically. But Sharma has a string of degrees to his credit: an MSc in microelectronics, he also did his LLB and later a doctorate in student and police relationship.