politicisation of the Indian police and active participation of Indian policemen in politics. This
may be true of policemen in the rest of South Asia.
Undivided India was divided into India and Pakistan in 1947. Sri Lanka emerged a little later.
Bangladesh arose out of Pakistan in 1971. The ‘Transfer of Power’ from the British to the South
Asian political elites involved the unchanged retention of the entire criminal justice system and
the repressive police and administrative structures of the Raj. A Constitution and a
developmental structure was superimposed on the pre-existing repressive colonial legal
structure in India to meet the rising aspirations of the people for development and justice, which
were never met wholly or in full measure. People’s struggles continued. So did police repression.
Why have the postcolonial South Asian states failed to carry out democratic reforms of the
administration and the police after attaining ‘independence’? After all, the South Asian liberals
who had fought for liberation from colonial rule had indeed promised development with justice.
Why did they fail to do what they had obviously intended to do? Did this have to do with the class
character of the new regimes?
Reforms of the criminal justice reforms in South Asia are essential to essential to wipe out the
currently dominant police brutality and ‘staged encounter killings’. Corruption and inefficiency
are the other aspects of the deterioration of the criminal justice system. The problem is
complicated because of the ‘symbiotic relationship’ between ruling politicians and policemen.
The role of training in explicating and implementing police accountability cannot be
underestimated.
Accountability means an obligation or willingness to accept responsibility and account for one’s
actions. Accountability in the context of governance means that public officials have an
obligation to explain their decisions and actions to citizens. Accountability is achieved through