Commond and Control Centre, Surat City Police
The first phase, which started in 2011, involved installation of 104 CCTV cameras backed by a Control Room which has been crafted to allow scope for future expansion. Asthaana took only 90 days to operationalize it. It cost no more than Rs 10.51 crores. All this technology was purchased through a transparent World Bank approved tender process. Today 650 cameras are already in place and the future plan involves covering every nook and corner of the city with 5000 cameras, including the outlying coastal areas. This means at the press of a button, the Control Room can watch any untoward incident as it is unfolding – thus making it easy for the police to respond to emergencies with speed. Even if all the cameras are not being monitored simultaneously, the moment an incident happens, in case the Control Room has not caught it instantly, the local beat constable or even local citizens know the Control Number and can inform about the happening through a call. In that case, the Control room at once focuses on the footage captured by cameras on that location—be it a fire, accident, theft, murder or doings of a riotous mob.
The system allows the footage of 5000 cameras to be stored for a full one month—all of it accessible at the press of a button. The cameras allow for close up shots as well as zooming in at the exact location to get minute details of the spot. That is why police response to calamities as well as mishaps, accidents can be swift and well informed.
Asthaana explained how merely having CCTV cameras doesn’t work unless the Control Room is so designed that it can remain operational during emergencies. For example, the Taj Hotel in Mumbai which was the site of a gruesome terror attack in 2009, had enough CCTV cameras. But since the Control Room was inside the hotel, the footage captured in CCTV cameras could not be accessed by the police to figure out the movement of terrorists. But the Surat Control Room can gather all the live footage from all over the City in real time. In key public places like the railway station, they have organized 3D coverage.
In the first phase itself, the incidents of crime came down by 27%. Since then as the system keeps expanding, there has been progressive decline of crime incidents. The system acts as a major deterrent because miscreants know the likelihood of being caught is much higher than under routine Indian style policing. In 2013 itself 44 serious cases of crime in addition to many smaller ones were detected and solved through this system. For instance, on 26/12/13 a murder was committed at 4.03 am in the Athwa police station area. The killers left the body in a khandhar (dilapidated, abandoned building). The CCTV cameras outside that khandharcaught 3 young men moving suspiciously around 4 am. Those video images helped the police zero in on the murderers very swiftly.
The plan is to equip each road of Surat with 3 CCTV cameras, each with a catchment area of one km radius. There would be two cameras for 2 lane movement roads and a third camera that observes the entire road. Multiple cameras are being installed for micro analysis of lane movement, such as catching the details on the vehicle’s number plate.
All these cameras are water-proof and weather-proof. Even though the technology has been purchased from Israel through an open tender system, the servicing is under the charge of a local Surat based company. Local servicing has made the system much more cost efficient.
The local police was trained into the use of this technology by the Computer Engineering Department of South Gujarat University free of charge. The head of this department is also a member of the Technical Committee set up by the Police Commissioner. Asthaana has also involved a large spectrum of citizens, including businessmen as stake holders in this entire system. It is this active citizen participation and partnership which has made the system a success.
The success is not just about crime figures falling but in greater confidence of citizens in their city police. You don’t find many grumbling and disgruntled citizens in Surat. They take pride in their police and the general administration of their city. One clear evidence: it is common to see young unescorted women moving around the city late at night, right into the early hours of the morning, especially on weekends.
It is equally common to see families with little children enjoying roadside picnics well past midnight in sundry parts of the city. During the Navratri festival young girls go around laden with expensive jewelry without any fear of being robbed or abducted. There is a palpable sense of confidence among citizens in the law and order situation and the ability of the police to keep criminals at bay.
A lot of course depends on the kind of leadership Asthaana has provided to those under him. He is available to citizens round the clock. His personal mobile number is well known to people in the city and Asthaana invariably picks up the phone himself. Most of the time, you don’t have to go through a whole hierarchy of secretaries to speak to him. He is also respected for his integrity and probity and comes down heavily on those found indulging in malpractices or running extortion rackets.
But none of the above would work beyond a point it Asthaana did not get solid political backing from his chief minister. Asthaana was in field duty jobs for eleven long years while Narendra Modi was CM. He says, Modi ensured for the police freedom from political interference first and foremost by his own conduct. “In the 11 years that I worked under Mr Modi as CM, first as in-charge of investigation into Godhra train massacre, then as Police Commissioner, Baroda and finally as Police Commissioner Surat, the CM never called me even once to influence my decisions. In fact, I got full backing even when I had to take tough action against miscreants within the BJP.”
For instance in 2008 when Asthaana was Police Commissioner of Baroda, he had the challenge of ensuring peacefully Ganpati Visarjan in a city where every such religious festival led to communal clashes. As part of tightening security arrangements he took into preventive custody some influential persons as well. This included some BJP workers who were involved in provocative incidents. This inevitably produced a strong political reaction because as members of the ruling party, the BJP workers did not expect to be hauled up thus. So Asthaana phoned the Home Secretary and reported the matter to him and explained why that action was felt necessary. Asthaana says within five minutes he got a call back from the CM’s office saying, “go ahead and be as tough as necessary”. That strengthened the morale of the police in dealing firmly with miscreants. Consequently, that was the end of mischief mongering on Ganpati Visarjan and other such important festivals – which all passed incident free. Likewise, during the course of Anna Hazare inspired agitation, on one occasion, the police had to resort to lathi-charge. The news of this upset Modi but when Asthaana explained and described the ground situation which led to police action, Modi backed his decision.
Now that Narendra Modi as the Prime-Minister has issued numerous public statements that safety of citizens, especially of women, will be his prime concern, one hopes along with necessary changes in the Police Act, Modi government will extend the tried and tested Surat method of policing all over the country and handpick the best cops to run the system in high crime prone cities and towns of India.
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