Showing posts with label Maharashtra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maharashtra. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 March 2018

IPS Officer’s Idea Has Inspired 42000 Youngsters To Fight Crime And Terrorism

According to crime data released by the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), Maharashtra has the second highest number of juveniles in conflict with the law in the country. Distressing as it may sound, the state also has a high incidence of radicalization among young people.
With overwhelming data supporting the fact that a large chunk of Maharashtra’s youth was moving towards a violent direction, a concerned state police has been working to address this issue. A community model has been designed and implemented in schools and colleges to foster greater interaction between the police force and students.
But the top-down nature of this conventional model has ensured that, more often than not, the attempts have been in vain — the students listen to the words of the police officer but later dismiss what they have heard.

The good news is that a positive change is slowly but steadily rolling in. And this is transformation is happening due to the efforts of people like IPS officer Harssh A Poddar.

The ASP Malegaon’s unique initiative has created 42,000 young leaders against crime and terror in the last three years!

“Blend saffron, white and green on the palette and you get khaki”, says IPS officer Harssh Poddar.
A law graduate from National University of Juridical Sciences (NUJS) in Kolkata, Harssh has a tall list of notable achievements under his belt. A winner of the prestigious Chevening Scholarship (a scholarship awarded by the UK government to outstanding students with leadership potential), he has done his masters in International and Constitutional Law from Balliol College of the University of Oxford.
Following this, Harssh joined work as a corporate lawyer with Clifford Chance in London before returning to India to pursue something much closer to his heart.
“I bid goodbye to London in 2010 because I wanted to be a civil servant,” he told The Times of India. “I wanted to be a part of policy-making in India.”
And Harssh fulfilled his dream when he aced the UPSC examination not once but twice. The first time he made it into Indian Revenue Service (IRS) and the second time, in 2013, he secured the rank of 361 to opt for Indian Police Service (IPS).
IPS Officer Harsh Poddar
During his training at the Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel National Police Academy, Harssh did a project that involved conducting a workshop for blind children. What made this workshop’s format different from conventional ones was that the children were divided into small groups and asked to draft laws for the differently abled (instead of just listening to lectures on rights and awareness).
Harssh observed that with assistance and encouragement provided by IPS probationers, the children could be induced to examine the subject deeply and act as their own agencies. This learning remained with him even as he was deputed on his first posting in Maharashtra police.
And the same thought struck Harssh a couple of years later when he was asked by Maharashtra’s DGP to suggest innovative policies that would effectively tackle juvenile delinquency in the state. His idea was accepted and thus began the Youth Parliament Championship.
Harssh Poddar being felicitated by the Maharashtra CM for his outstanding work.
Conceptualised and coordinated by Harssh (the then-ASP of Karveer), this initiative’s core aim was to break the strong linkage between alienation and crime by giving the youth a platform to take action against anti-social tendencies.
Under the pro-active officer’s able guidance, pilot projects were started in Aurangabad’s Nath Valley School (NVS) and Aurangabad Police Public School (APPS). The selected students were divided into teams of three and given a number of topics related to crime (such as sexual offences, terrorism, naxalism, corruption, financial fraud etc).
Each team was also given the part of a particular stakeholder (like the government, the police department and the civic society) and a speaker from each was chosen to speak about their role in crime prevention. Each team would also be asked to come up with solutions pertaining to the part they were playing.
When an impact assessment was conducted, it was clear that this bottom-up approach had led to growing awareness among the students about the issues they had discussed. More significantly, it was noticed that the students (particularly those from the lower and middle-income groups) were acting as crucial agents of awareness for their family and neighbours.
In fact, a Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) — a non-intrusive mean of testing the potential of an individual to veer towards crime or radicalization — designed by psychology students of Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University (BAMU) showed a marked reduction in the potential for criminal behavious among the participants.
Harssh Poddar with Akshay Kumar during a Youth Parliament event.
Encouraged by the success of Harssh’s idea, Maharashtra police began replicating the project in other districts. Ever since, this simple yet powerful idea has reached out to nearly 42000 youngsters, ensuring that they don’t go down the path of violence.
Interestingly, this is not the only reason for the immense respect Harssh commands in the inner circles of Maharahtra police. The people-centric officer has also been streamlining the management of rural police stations and getting them ISO certified with infrastructure funds from village panchayats.
He has also launched an innovative project, Udaan, that provides free coaching for entrance exams and career counselling to local students.

More recently, when violence erupted in several cities of Maharashtra over the Bhima-Koregaon issue, Malegaon remained peaceful thanks to the efforts of Harssh and his hardworking team.
What makes this fact especially remarkable is that fact that Malegaon has a long history of violent strife, bomb blasts and communal disturbance. Located in Nashik district, the city also has sizeable populations of Dalits, Muslims and Hindus. As such, it presents a formidable challenge to law enforcement agencies.
Cognizant of these facts, Harssh’s first steps on taking charge was reinforcing intelligence networks and preparing police stations for social disturbances that may erupt suddenly. This included surprise riot-control drills, timely maintenance of equipment, and creation of a community network that would provide timely information to the police force.
To ensure that irrefutable evidence was collected to identify and book unruly elements who incited the public, Harssh also got CCTV cameras installed on a series of police vans.
However, while his administrative brilliance makes him popular in the official circles, its the IPS officer’s instinctive thoughtfulness that endears him deeply to the common man.

On Children’s Day, Malegaon police officers led by Harssh took over 200 children from orphanages and juvenile homes (many of them rescued child labourers) to the local fair!


By channelising the energy of Maharashta’s youth in a positive direction, he has not only given the state’s fight against crime a big boost, Harssh Poddar has also inspired many officers across the country to do the same. Here’s wishing this dynamic IPS officer all the very best in all his endeavours.

Article source : 

Tuesday, 2 January 2018

Meet Shakubai Kabure, Who Educated Her Sons Despite All Odds

“Never forget where you came from and keep working, no matter how worse the situation might get,” says 60-year-old Shakubai Kabure from Latwadi village of Kolhapur in Maharashtra. Shakubai has been an agricultural labourer for more than 40 years now and has been struggling to make ends meet, but always nursed a dream of educating her children and has ensured that she achieved it.

Shakubai’s difficulties started way back during childhood when her father suddenly abandoned the family. “My mother was an agricultural labourer, and it her back-breaking labour of many years which helped us survive,” she says while looking at her mother’s photo.

Shakubai Kabure. Picture Courtesy: Sanket Jain
For several years, Shakubai travelled 20 km back and forth from Latwadi village to Shivanakwadi village where she worked as an agricultural labourer for six hours daily which fetched her Rs 80 per day. “Going to Shivanakwadi is not easy for us because it involves taking a bus every day and there is no fixed timing of departure from the work. We get the money weekly, and not daily which makes it even more difficult to survive,” she explains.
Currently, Shakubai works on the outskirts of the village, where she gets less than Rs 160 per day, for ten hours of work. “We are paid weekly, and at times we do not have food to eat at home—there are days when we have survived only on porridge. However, that was no reason for me to stop,” says Shakubai.

However, today, Shakubai is a happy woman. Her younger son Sidappa Kabure, who is 26, has been selected to be a part of the Border Security Force (BSF) and is currently undergoing training.

Photograph of Sidappa Kabure. Picture Courtesy: Sanket Jain
“I wanted my son to join the police force, but when I asked about his dreams, he replied saying that he wanted to join the armed forces. I never forced him to become a policeman then, because a person enjoys his life only when he likes to do what he is passionate about,” she exclaims.
Her elder son, Santosh, 32, is a tenant farmer and works in the 1.5-acre land where he gets to keep 25 percent of the produce, while the rest is paid to the landowner. Before working as a tenant farmer, he worked for several years as a labourer in the nearby textile mill.

“We are alive only because of the hard work and tremendous labour of my mother,” says Santosh. Unfortunately, he couldn’t complete his education beyond Class 4. “I quit education to make the family’s ends meet, and I also wanted my younger brother to study,” he adds.

Santosh Kabure. Picture Courtesy: Sanket Jain
However, financial constraints made it difficult for Sidappa to study. He worked multiple jobs to buy his books and pay the fees. He used to cut sugarcane in the fields, work as an agricultural labourer and also work on the construction sites. “He had a passion for clearing the exams, and would never ask us for money to buy books,” says Shakubai with a smile.
Shakubai’s husband passed away in 2001 due to alcohol addiction. He used to work both as a stone worker and a labourer loading and unloading industrial materials. “My husband was an alcoholic, and would always create a ruckus in the house. Those were difficult times, but I persisted in educating my children,” says Shakubai.
She adds, “Sidappa calls me and asks to stop working as he says that I have faced a lot of troubles and now is the time to rest. I reply saying that I can’t be home and rest throughout the day because my body will stop functioning.”
(This story was written by Sanket Jain)

Popular Posts

TAG

Karke Dekho Acha Lagta Hai Ahmedabad india Maharashtra NGO Rajasthan education underprivileged #Chennairains 24-Year-Old Student Adopted an Entire Village 3D Painted Zebra Crossing 6-Pack Band ALOK SAGAR Adopted an Entire Village Age-Old Problems Ahmedabad City Ahmedabad no Rickshawalo Akshay kumar Amdavadi auto driver Anastassiya Savchenko Aurangabad Avinash Yadav BETUL Bal Gokulam Beggar Donating Bengaluru Biju Abraham Celebrate Holi Change Chennai Civil Services Community Development Donkeys That Cure Depression ELECTRICITY Educate Homeless Environment conservation Every Sunday Fights Violence Against Women Footpath Paathshala Footpath School Footpath classes Gandhi Smarak Sangrahalay Ganga Bachao Andolan Gets Cleaned Governance Guddu Baba Gujarat HOSHANGABAD Haircuts Hari Balaji Helmetless Holi Ahmedabad 2016 Humans of Amdavad IPS officer ISO IWB Indian Women Blog India’s First Transgender Music Band Juin Dutta KOCHAMU Kamalesh Parmar Kerala Man Khimjibhai Prajapati Kolhapur Kumbarwada Kumbarwada slum Lokshala MADHYA PRADESH Maharashtra police Menstruation Mithalal Sindhi NUJS Odisha Patna Pigeon Tower Politics Pratibha Choudhary Proactive Citizens RAGHURAM RAJAN Rajasthan Village Rural India Saumya Pandya Thakkur Shakubai Shakuntala Pandya Sonali Mukherjee Tamil Nadu The Blue Bird Foundation UPSC Udaan Unique Ways of Celebrating Holi Vadodara Vadodara causes Vidya Rattan Sharma Vikas Chandra Village Woman Sarpanch Youth Parliament Championship ahmedabad celebrate Holi ashok chakra beggar biopic bravery cancer cancer awareness chennai floods chennai rains chennai relief children clean Ganga disaster management do good ideas education in india environmentalist flood relief floods friendship day specials harssh poddar hijack holi holi 2016 juvenile crime karachi kolkata leukaemia malegaon mumbai municipal schools neerja neerja bhanot no water this holi orphanage pan am pan am flight 73 radicalisation rain road safety drive save water this holi sonam kapoor st jude india childcare centres street children terrorism terrorists the better india this Holi with yaaron KI toli traffic police underprivileged children volunteers in chennai work for humanity क्या वाकई भगवान हमें देख रहा है