I had made a solemn promise to the people during my election campaigns in the run-up to the 2005 Bihar Assembly polls that I would re-establish the rule of the law in the state.
That was a challenging task, to say the least. After all, I had to demystify the myth that crime could not be kept on a tight leash in the state.
But it had to be accomplished within the framework of the law. I had often come across reports from different parts of the country about alleged excesses committed by the law enforcement agencies in the name of maintaining law of order. I, therefore, had to ensure that nobody violated human rights in pursuit of the avowed objective of our government.
With that purpose in mind, I first turned my attention to the logs of cases registered under the Arms Act which were pending before various courts for long. I realised that they could be disposed of quickly because the witnesses in all those cases were primarily the policemen.
I thought if those witnesses could depose in the courts it would lead to speedy disposal of the cases. If convicted, the accused could be imprisoned up to three years under the Arms Act. Our government subsequently set up a dedicated cell at the police headquarters to facilitate that. I instructed the officials to ensure that they should not seek more than one date from the courts for deposition of those witnesses. I told them that it was for the courts to give verdict in any case but it was the bounden duty of the government to develop a system for facilitating the speedy process of justice. Many witnesses, who had shifted to Jharkhand after the creation of a new state in 2000, were also brought to Bihar to depose before the courts.
This proved very effective in bringing down the number of pending cases under the Arms Act, as scores of accused were convicted or acquitted at the end of their trials.
As the juggernaut of speedy justice rolled on, I simply forgot who were involved in those cases. It became immaterial whether the accused was known to me or not. It soon became clear to everybody that law ultimately had to take its own course. Anybody committing the crime in Bihar could not have hoped for evading the long arms of the law.
That instilled enough confidence in the common man. They realised that it was no longer possible for anybody, howsoever mighty, to go scot-free after breaking the laws of the land. Witnesses in several long-standing cases thereafter shunned fear and met the district superintendents of police on their own to say that they were ready to depose before the courts and help bring the culprits to book.
Hardly surprising then, the habitual offenders who broke the law with impunity in the past knew that our government meant business when it reiterated its commitment to rein in the crime at any cost. Those who loved to flaunt their guns through tinted windowpanes of their vehicles or others who loved to fire gunshots in the air through the shamiana of a wedding ceremony with their unlicensed guns got the message in no time as well.
I wanted to formulate an action plan to accelerate the process for speedy justice. In 2006, I convened a two-day meeting which was attended by the chief justice and other judges of the Patna High Court besides all the public prosecutors, district magistrates and superintendents of police. We decided to follow the action plan in letter and spirit. It resulted in conviction of thousands of accused in different cases through speedy trials. Many trials involving high-profile accused were even held in the jail premises on a day-to-day basis.
The sheer expediency of the whole process instilled a sense of fear in the minds of gun-toting brigade so much so that the brazen display of arms during wedding ceremonies, which was a normal feature earlier, came to a halt. All I needed was to underline the fact that our government had a zero-tolerance policy vis-à-vis crime in the state.
I would also like to mention here that not even a single incident of communal tension or caste strife took place in the state over the past four-and-a-half years. I decided to make the district magistrates and superintendents of police directly accountable for maintaining social harmony in the areas under their jurisdiction.
When I had taken over I realised that many police stations in the state did not have adequate infrastructure. They were even bereft of basic needs for effective policing. If anybody went to the police stations to lodge an FIR, he was told to bring his own paper and other stationery material.
Our government earmarked a separate annual fund to meet the demands of the police stations. These efforts quickly led to restoring the people’s faith in the system of justice. The fear had gone out of their minds. It was after many years that people could be seen moving out with their families on the streets till late night in the cities of Bihar.
It was because of the all-pervasive fear that people had earlier stopped going out with their families in the late evenings. There was a time when the best of restaurants in Patna used to have barely one or two customers at night. But now, you can see long queues of the people waiting for their turn outside many eateries in Patna.
The family audience, which had shunned watching movies long ago, also returned to the theatres even in the night shows. I have no hesitation to say that the change was the reflection of the overall improvement in the law and order scenario. The considerable decline in crime also had salubrious impact on other sectors. The contractors started taking up work on many road projects across the state. They were no longer afraid of doing work even in the remotest areas of Bihar because there was no extortionist around to demand their ‘commission’ from them.
There has also been a boom in the real estate in Bihar. I am often told that the cost of a flat in Patna at present is higher than many developed cities in the country. This has happened in spite of the last year’s economic slowdown which had depreciated property prices elsewhere.
The property prices had remained stagnant in Bihar for many years preceding my tenure. Though there are no official figures of distress sale during the previous regime, it is a fact that many people had sold off their houses and other property and migrated to other states after being disillusioned with the sorry state of affairs here.
I was very upset when I came to know about an unfortunate incident involving a Japanese tourist in Gaya recently. In fact, I could not sleep the whole night when I came to know about it. I directed the police officials to take quick action against the rape accused and put them through speedy trial. The accused in the case were arrested and charge-sheeted within a week. The culprits will be convicted soon.
It is true that crime cannot be eradicated completely from society. But it can effectively be checked through proper policing and time-bound justice. Our government has won the confidence of people by ensuring punishment for each and every crime. It is no longer possible for anybody to commit any crime and get away with it in Bihar.
They know that somebody is watching!