■ By Mukesh S Singh
RAIPUR
■CM Sai took the call after a
closed-door review with top
brass; HM Vijay Sharma’s
sustained coordination
couldn’t avert deferral.
■ Task force submitted
proposal on Sept 27; multiple
rejoinders sought by Home
Department.
■ Blueprint proposes IGP-level
Commissioner, one
Addl CP, eight DCPs
and 20 ACPs for Raipur
THE rollout of Chhattisgarh’s first Police
Commissionerate in Raipur – originally planned
for November 1 as part of the state’s Silver Jubilee
celebrations – has been deferred to January 2026,
following a closed-door meeting chaired by Chief
Minister Vishnu Deo Sai. The project, described
as one of the Government’s most significant
administrative reforms, will now undergo additional vetting to ensure a smooth and well-coordinated transition.
A senior official familiar with the closed-door
meeting said Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai took
note of the procedural delays with concern and
advised that the rollout of the Police
Commissionerate be taken up only after all legal,
administrative, and operational aspects are
fully harmonised.
“The Chief Minister emphasised that the new system must be robust, practical, and acceptable across departments,” the
official observed.
The adjustment comes despite consistent
efforts by Home Minister Vijay Sharma, who had
been working closely with senior police officers
to facilitate an on-time rollout. However, the
delay in submission of the final blueprint by the
Police Headquarters (PHQ) and the time required
for inter-departmental consultations resulted in
a shift of the implementation timeline. “The file
reached the Home Department later than anticipated, and given the scale of administrative and
legal coordination involved, additional time was
deemed appropriate,” said a senior bureaucrat
closely involved in the coordination between
PHQ and the Secretariat. Speaking to ‘The
Hitavada,’ Additional Chief Secretary (Home
Department) Manoj Pingua said, “It is in the
process since lots of technicalities are involved,
given the extensive and intensive framework
required for the Police Commissionerate in
Raipur, which is aimed for the larger benefit of
the people underlining the technical and institutional depth being built into State’s first metropolitan policing structure to ensure it stands
the test of administrative and legal scrutiny.”
According to a credible source who is part of the
task force committee, the seven-member PHQ
task force submitted its detailed proposal to the
Home Department on September 27, following
which multiple rejoinders and clarifications were
sought by the department. The panel has also recommended a legislative route through
the Chhattisgarh Police Amendment Act, 2025, which would
formally introduce the Commissionerate system in Raipur.
The draft draws upon best practices from Maharashtra’s
Mumbai Commissionerate and Odisha’s twin-city model
of Bhubaneswar–Cuttack. As per the proposal, the Raipur
Police Commissionerate structure envisions a Commissioner
of Police (CP) not below the rank of Inspector General of
Police (IGP), supported by one Additional Commissioner
of Police (Addl. CP) of Deputy Inspector General (DIG) rank.
Beneath them, the framework proposes eight Deputy
Commissioners of Police (DCPs) including four zonal officers for North, West, Central, and Naya Raipur, and four
specialised DCPs for Cyber Crime, Headquarters, Traffic,
and Crime Against Women. Additionally, the blueprint recommends 20 Assistant Commissioners of Police (ACPs),
largely drawn from officers of the Deputy Superintendent
of Police (DSP) or City Superintendent of Police (CSP) rank,
to strengthen operational command across the city’s expanding jurisdictions. The PHQ panel, chaired by Additional
Director General of Police (Planning and Provisioning)
Pradeep Gupta, included Inspector General (Narcotics)
Ajay Yadav, Inspector General (Raipur Range) Amresh
Mishra, Inspector General (CID) Dhruv Gupta, Deputy
Inspector General (Telecom) Abhishek Meena, Deputy
Inspector General (CCTNS) Santosh Singh, and
Superintendent of Police (Special Intelligence Branch)
Prabhat Kumar.
Legal inputs were provided by Mukula
Sharma, Joint Director of Prosecution, who served as a special invitee. The final blueprint submitted amid an intensive phase of administrative reviews and inter-departmental consultations has now been referred to a committee of senior IAS officers from the Home, Finance, and General
Administration Departments for detailed vetting, legal
review, and fiscal alignment. Officials said the postponement also coincides with an event-packed schedule in
November. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to
inaugurate the Silver Jubilee celebrations in Nava Raipur
on November 1 and will return later in the month for the
60th All-India Conference of Directors General and
Inspectors General of Police, from November 28 to 30.
Union Home Minister Amit Shah and National Security
Advisor Ajit Doval are expected to attend, along with senior police and security officials from across the country Once the necessary scrutiny and inter-departmental concurrence are complete, the Chief Minister will finalise the
rollout route, which will very likely be through the
Chhattisgarh Assembly by introducing the Chhattisgarh
Police Amendment Act, 2025, on the floor of the House
during the winter session expected in late December,” confirmed a senior task force member, adding that the transition is being approached with both legal caution and institutional foresight.