Bangalore: Tackling Terror - All-party Meet Harps on Same Old Things


TNN

Bangalore, Dec 2: The all-party meet convened by chief minister B S Yeddyurappa on Monday to chalk out a strategy to tackle terror, turned into one more occasion for the politicians to take swipes at each other and score brownie points.

The meet was attended by MP Ananth Kumar, BJP state unit chief D V Sadanand Gowda, Congress leaders R V Deshpande, Mallikarjun Kharge, D K Shiva Kumar and V S Ugrappa, JD(S) leaders H D Kumaraswamy and M C Nanaiah, and CPM state general secretary V G K Nair, among others.

The Congress utilized the opportunity to hit out at the ruling BJP government for the mass transfers, especially in the police department. "The entire police department is demoralized due to the large-scale transfers. They have lost moral courage,'' fumed KPCC president R V Deshpande.

Others also spoke on similar lines, and the suggestions were many: have a strong Anti-Terrorist Cell with separate recruitment, special training and an exclusive intelligence wing, bring in strong laws, strengthen the intelligence wing, enhance salaries for police personnel, allocate more money for police department and modernize the force, create public awareness on terrorism, issue ID cards at the police station level and enumerate newcomers in that jurisdiction.

Before offering suggestions, the participants did not forget to harp on the shortcomings in the department -- shortage of staff, lack of modern equipment and trained personnel, ineffective intelligence apparatus... nothing the citizen doesn't know.

Then, sensing public outrage and the sensitivity of the issue, they took a `politically correct' stand and agreed to cooperate with the government in the fight against terror.

As on earlier occasions, the CM announced he would take an all-party delegation to the Centre to ask for more resources, including a National Security Guards (NSG) unit for Bangalore. 

  

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Comment on this article

  • Ronnie, M'lore

    Tue, Dec 02 2008

    Public outrage is not something to take note of and then decide. Public anguish is real. In Mumbai, things have come to a stage where people are on the verge of taking law on their own hands. A few resignations here and there on the moral ground doesn't serve the purpose, on the contrary it reflects the weakness of our politicians and sends a message to the public "I am not capable and a drain on the tax payers money". How many more terror attacks are we waiting for to be able to come together and put an end to this menace? Is this the time to fight each for scoring political points for the coming elections?

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