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Saturday, February 7, 2015
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
FIR registered 25 days after woman robbed of phone
FIR registered 25 days after woman robbed of phone
The Parksite police on
Tuesday registered an FIR, 25 days after a 23-year-old woman was robbed
of her mobile by a biker who threatened her with chopper in Vikhroli.
TOI had first reported the case of burking by a police officer (Morning
walker robbed of
phone, February 3). Legal experts asked why the cops waited for the
media to take up the issue. Sub-inspector Suresh Naik told Neelima
Shahi on Tuesday morning to record her statement at the police station.
“If I would have not approached my colleague working in the media, I
would have not known the difference between a missing certificate and an
FIR.Naik handed over the certificate, which I thought was an
FIR. Had he reacted promptly , the accused could have been caught when
I told him on January 26 that someone was accessing my home wi-fi
through my stolen mobile,“ Shahi told TOI.
Shahi has gone for a morning walk near the Kailas Complex stretch, which connects Vikhroli and Hiranandani Gardens, in Powai on January 9.The biker followed her and kept honking for her to stop. When she did not, he blocked her way with his bike. He threatened her and told her to hand over the mobile if she did not want to be harmed. “I have stopped going for morning walks after that. Anything could have happened that day . The police helpline was of no use in the emergency ,“ she alleged.
Deputy commissioner of police (zone VII) Vinaykumar Rathod said they had called the victim to register an FIR to take action to track down the accused. Rathod said, “It is unacceptable. Necessary steps will be taken.“
Former IPS officer-turnedlawyer Y P Singh said it was a serious violation of Section 154 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, which mandates that an FIR has to be registered immediately after information is received at a police station. A copy of the FIR also has to be provided to the complainant, he said. The officer could face criminal prosecution, in addition to departmental action, for such lapses.
TIMES VIEW :
If a robbery on the street is not a fit case for registering an FIR, then what is?
Instances like this lead us to doubt the veracity of the National Crime Records Bureau stats we are fed annually.
Shahi has gone for a morning walk near the Kailas Complex stretch, which connects Vikhroli and Hiranandani Gardens, in Powai on January 9.The biker followed her and kept honking for her to stop. When she did not, he blocked her way with his bike. He threatened her and told her to hand over the mobile if she did not want to be harmed. “I have stopped going for morning walks after that. Anything could have happened that day . The police helpline was of no use in the emergency ,“ she alleged.
Deputy commissioner of police (zone VII) Vinaykumar Rathod said they had called the victim to register an FIR to take action to track down the accused. Rathod said, “It is unacceptable. Necessary steps will be taken.“
Former IPS officer-turnedlawyer Y P Singh said it was a serious violation of Section 154 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, which mandates that an FIR has to be registered immediately after information is received at a police station. A copy of the FIR also has to be provided to the complainant, he said. The officer could face criminal prosecution, in addition to departmental action, for such lapses.
TIMES VIEW :
If a robbery on the street is not a fit case for registering an FIR, then what is?
Instances like this lead us to doubt the veracity of the National Crime Records Bureau stats we are fed annually.
`If Metro railway is built along coastal road, then its 2nd line & water transport plan may be shelved'
`If Metro is built along coastal
road, then its 2nd line & water transport plan may be shelved'
The proposed water transport
project between Nariman Point and Borivli and the city's second Metro
line may not be needed if a new mass rapid transit system is planned
along the coastal road. Chief minister Devendra Fadnavis is mulling
over the addition of a Metro corridor to the proposed 36-km-long
coastal corridor along the west coast (from Bandra to Kandivli).
“Fadnavis is keen on the project as a `Metro on the ground', except for three underground stretches at Juhu, Bandra and Malabar Hill, will be cheaper than the proposed second Metro line, which will be completely underground,“ said a senior official.
The second Metro line's cost has been pegged at more than Rs 24,000 crore. “If a Metro is planned along the coastal road between Nariman Point and Borivli, then we may have a rethink (about water transport and second Metro line). An in tegrated study to understand pros and cons has been commissioned.However, such a change may not affect the third Metro corridor between Colaba and SEEPZ,“ said a Mantralaya source. The government is keen on building a Metro network along the coastal road to discourage Mumbaikars from travelling in private vehicles and reduce congestion and pollution.The existing coastal road plan has incorporated the bus rapid transit system to facilitate easier commute. “The existing lines have been decided by various consultants such as Delhi Metro Rail Corporation after studying the city's existing and future commuter movement thoroughly . If the commuters in the western parts are encouraged to use the Metro planned along coastal road, then the burden on the existing suburban route will reduce. Commuters on the eastern section of the western suburbs can travel easily through the suburban railway or the 3rd Metro line,“ a source added.
However, some urban planners fear that the Metro will affect toll connection on the coastal route.
“Fadnavis is keen on the project as a `Metro on the ground', except for three underground stretches at Juhu, Bandra and Malabar Hill, will be cheaper than the proposed second Metro line, which will be completely underground,“ said a senior official.
The second Metro line's cost has been pegged at more than Rs 24,000 crore. “If a Metro is planned along the coastal road between Nariman Point and Borivli, then we may have a rethink (about water transport and second Metro line). An in tegrated study to understand pros and cons has been commissioned.However, such a change may not affect the third Metro corridor between Colaba and SEEPZ,“ said a Mantralaya source. The government is keen on building a Metro network along the coastal road to discourage Mumbaikars from travelling in private vehicles and reduce congestion and pollution.The existing coastal road plan has incorporated the bus rapid transit system to facilitate easier commute. “The existing lines have been decided by various consultants such as Delhi Metro Rail Corporation after studying the city's existing and future commuter movement thoroughly . If the commuters in the western parts are encouraged to use the Metro planned along coastal road, then the burden on the existing suburban route will reduce. Commuters on the eastern section of the western suburbs can travel easily through the suburban railway or the 3rd Metro line,“ a source added.
However, some urban planners fear that the Metro will affect toll connection on the coastal route.
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