A high-level encounter in Noida, between police and a gang posing to be police officers, ended with two arrests, with one of the accused left injured, police informed on Monday.
The incident took place near the Phase-1 police station. The gang was robbing people by going around as police officers. They had looted one courier boy of Rs 34,000 on December 1.
While two members of the gang were arrested, one managed to flee. Police said they were looking for him.
One accused named Deepanshu was injured after the firing.
The police said they recovered around 15 thousand rupees in cash, the car used in the robbery, fake police ID cards, one bike, and cartridges. (ANI)
When revelers hit the streets to celebrate New
Year Eve, Ajeet Pandey, 33, from Noida has chosen to serve piping hot tea to
policemen on duty. He sees it a humble gesture to acknowledge a thankless
policing job
Five years back, I was
returning from a New Year Eve’s party with my wife from a friend’s house in
Noida. I was barely three kilometers from home when the one of the tyres of my
car flattened and I pulled over. As luck would have it, even my spare wheel turned
out to be punctured.
Stuck on a Noida road at
one o’clock in the night with one’s wife is not exactly a pleasant thought.
Suddenly, out of nowhere, two policemen on a patrol bike approached us. As we
explained them our situation, they immediately called for assistance and got our
tyre fixed. One of them, in his late forties, suggested me to always double
check the spare tyre if venturing out at night with family. I thanked them
wholeheartedly and went home.
That was the time I
realised how important a policeman is for our society and how difficult their
job is. These must be sipahis, constables,
ASIs (assistant sub inspectors) and sub inspector level officials who do not
earn a fat check from their job but forego all festivals in the line of duty and
we the residents of this metropolitan city, remain thankless.
At that moment I
decided that I will visit policemen who are on duty at every festival. The next
evening, when revelers were on the streets of Noida on January 1st 2015, I
prepared three flask full of tea, packed up 100 paper-cups, a dozen biscuit packs
along with some chips and drove around the city for hours. I randomly visited
policemen who were working late in the bone-chilling weather and offered them piping
hot tea.
I was amazed to see
the reaction from the cops. They were happy and grateful with one cup of hot
tea and some biscuits. Actually, they were happy that the residents of this
city thought about them. It was a small gesture but it won hearts of the cops
and I too returned satisfied with the act.
Since then, I visit policemen on duty at all possible festivals to serve them tea and snacks. This New Year’s eve also, I visited many policemen on night patrol with tea and followed it up the next evening too.
If we keep calling the cops with all the bad names that are popular in the culture, how can we expect them to keep us safe? If we thank them at least once a year for their service, it will change the perception of a policeman. If someone is in trouble, the first relief comes in the form of Khaki. This is the truth.
So, why do we shy away in thanking them? Why can’t we celebrate our festivals with those spending nights on the streets to keep us safe? This is a very small gesture and if all of us start following this, there will be a drastic change in policing and police- people relationship in India.
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