By Mukesh S Singh
RAIPUR,
Hybrid model blends best practices from Odisha and Punjab. Nov 1 eyed for formal launch.
THE Police Headquarters (PHQ)
in Nava Raipur has moved into
advanced stages of drafting
Chhattisgarh’s first-ever Police
Commissionerate system for
Raipur, with a seven-member
task force now finalising pro-
posals for a hybrid model based
on comparative study of over
two dozen Commissionerates
across India. This follows Chief
Minister Vishnu Deo Sai’s
momentous Independence Day
declaration, aiming to overhaul
urban policing and replace lega-
cy dual-control structures with
a unified executive command.
The PHQ-appointed task
force has extensively studied six
states-Odisha (Bhubaneswar
and Cuttack), Madhya Pradesh
(Bhopal and Indore), Uttar
Pradesh (Agra, Ghaziabad,
Varanasi, Prayagraj, and Noida),
Telangana (Warangal and
Karimnagar), Punjab (Ludhiana
and Ambala)-and the existing
Commissionerate frameworks
of all four metro cities and key
tier-2 hubs.
Based on its comparative
analysis, the panel has recom-
mended a hybrid model
drawing on the strengths of
Odisha and Punjab
Commissionerates, citing their
recent, adaptable, and legally
streamlined structures.
Sources familiar with the
internal deliberations told The
Hitavada that the Raipur
Commissionerate will blend
best practices from both states
while tailoring the system to
meet local law enforcement
needs, urban dynamics, and
future scalability. Legal frame-
works are being prepared
through two pathways-one by
ordinance and another through
a cabinet notification.
In either
case, the rollout is expected to pave the way for enactment of a dedicated Metropolitan
Police or Urban Police Act in the near future. The panel has
also taken into account the 2005 Draft Model Police Act,
which was framed by a Union Home Ministry-appointed
committee and recommended Commissionerate systems
in cities with populations exceeding 10 lakh. With Raipur’s
urban and floating population now above 20 lakh, the cap-
ital meets all qualifying parameters for the upgraded sys-
tem. According to high-ranking officers in PHQ, the pro-
posed structure will include one Commissioner of Police,
one Additional Commissioner, and nearly a dozen Deputy
Commissioners covering east, west, north, south zones, as
well as traffic, rural, crime, cyber, and headquarters wings.
“The idea is to eliminate command bottlenecks and insti-
tute a single, agile executive system for fast-response polic-
ing,” a senior officer involved with the framework told The
Hitavada. Sources confirmed to The Hitavada that the com-
mittee is chaired by Additional Director General of Police
(Planning & Provisioning) Pradeep Gupta and includes
Inspector General of Police (Narcotics) Ajay Yadav, Inspector
General of Police (Raipur Range) Amresh Mishra, Inspector
General of Police (Crime Investigation Department-CID)
Dhruv Gupta, Deputy Inspector General of Police (Telecom)
Abhishek Meena, Deputy Inspector General of Police (Crime
and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems-CCTNS)
Santosh Singh, and Superintendent of Police (Special
Intelligence Branch-SIB) Prabhat Kumar. Legal support is
being provided by Mukula Sharma, Joint Director of
Prosecution, Directorate of Public Prosecution, who has
been appointed as a special invitee. If the legal and admin-
istrative clearances proceed as expected, officials confirm
that the Police Commissionerate system could be formal-
ly launched on November 1, aligning with the state’s
Foundation Day and Silver Jubilee celebrations.
“All depends
on the state leadership as to how it will decide which way
it wants to go ahead with the two proposals to be submit-
ted by the task force committee for final green signal by
the Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai-the brainchild behind
accomplishing the unaccomplished so far,” the officer con-
cluded.