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Crime in India

Crime in India has been recorded since the British Raj, with comprehensive statistics now compiled annually by the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), under the Ministry of Home Affairs (India).

Crime rate in India 2021 (crime per 100,000 population)[1]
Murder2.1
Rape4.8
Kidnapping7.4
Death by road accidents10.1
Dowry deaths1.0
Grievous hurt6.6
Sexual harassment2.6
Human trafficking0.1
Riots3.1
Theft42.9
Burglary7.2
Extortion0.8
Robbery2.1
Forgery, cheating & fraud11.1
Drugs trafficking2.4
Illegal arms3.3
Crimes against children33.6
Cyber crime3.9
Crimes against children rate is calculated per 100,000 children population

In 2021, a total of 60,96,310 crimes, comprising 36,63,360 Indian Penal Code (IPC) crimes and 24,32,950 Special and Local Laws (SLL) crimes were registered nationwide. It is a 7.65% annual decrease from 66,01,285 crimes in 2020; the crime rate (per 100,000 people) has decreased from 487.8 in 2020 to 445.9 in 2021, but still significantly higher from 385.5 in 2019.[2][3] In 2021, offences affecting the human body contributed 30%, offences against property contributed 20.8%, and miscellaneous IPC crimes contributed 29.7% of all cognizable IPC crimes.[2] Murder rate was 2.1 per 100,000, kidnapping rate was 7.4 per 100,000, and rape rate was 4.8 per 100,000 in 2021.[2] According to the UN, the homicide rate was 2.95 per 100,000 in 2020 with 40,651 recorded, down from a peak of 5.46 per 100,000 in 1992 and essentially unchanged since 2017, higher than most countries in Asia and Europe and lower than most in the Americas and Africa although numerically one of the highest due to the large population.[4]

Investigation rate is calculated as all cases disposed, quashed or withdrawn by police as a percentage of total cases available for investigation. The investigation rate of IPC crimes in India was 64.9% in 2021.[5] Charge-sheeting rate is calculated as all cases, where charges were framed against accused, as a percentage of total cases disposed after investigation. The charge-sheeting rate of IPC crimes in India was 72.3% in 2021.[2] Conviction rate is calculated as all cases, where accused was convicted by court after completion of a trial, as a percentage of total cases where trial was completed. The conviction rate of IPC crimes in India was 57.0% in 2021.[5] In 2021, 51,540 murders were under investigation by police, of which charges were framed in 26,382; and 46,127 rapes were under investigation by police, of which charges were framed in 26,164.[2] In 2021, 2,48,731 murders were under trial in courts, of which conviction was given in 4,304; and 1,85,836 rapes were under trial in courts, of which conviction was given in 3,368.[2] The murder conviction rate was 42.4 and the rape conviction rate was 28.6 in 2021.[2]

Over time Edit

 
Incidence of cognisable crimes in India 1953–2007.[6]

A report published by the NCRB compared the crime rates of 1953 and 2006. The report noted that burglary (known as house-breaking[7] in India) declined over a period of 53 years by 79.84% (from 147,379, a rate of 39.3/100,000 in 1953 to 91,666, a rate of 7.9/100,000 in 2006), murder has increased by 7.39% (from 9,803, a rate of 2.61 in 1953 to 32,481, a rate of 2.81/100,000 in 2006).[8]

Kidnapping increased by 47.80% (from 5,261, a rate of 1.40/100,000 in 1953 to 23,991, a rate of 2.07/100,000 in 2006), robbery declined by 28.85% (from 8,407, rate of 2.24/100,000 in 1953 to 18,456, rate of 1.59/100,000 in 2006) and riots have declined by 10.58% (from 20,529, a rate of 5.47/100,000 in 1953 to 56,641, a rate of 4.90/100,000 in 2006).[8]

In 2006, 5,102,460 cognisable crimes were committed including 1,878,293 (IPC) crimes and 3,224,167 Special & Local Laws (SLL) crimes, with an increase of 1.5% over 2005 (50,26,337).[9] IPC crime rate in 2006 was 167.7 compared to 165.3 in 2005 showing an increase of 1.5% in 2006 over 2005.[9] SLL crime rate in 2006 was 287.9 compared to 290.5 in 2005 showing a decline of 0.9% in 2006 over 2005.[9]

Year[8] Total cog. crimes under IPC, per 100,000 Murder per 100,000 Kidnapping per 100,000 Robbery per 100,000 Burglary (known as house-breaking in India) per 100,000
1953 160.5 2.61 1.40 2.24 39.3
2006 162.3 2.81 2.07 1.60 7.92
% Change in 2006 over 1953 1.1 7.39 47.80 −28.85 −79.84

SOURCE: National Crime Records Bureau[8]

Crime by location Edit

As of 2019, Delhi had the highest crime rate (incidence of crime per 100,000 population) among all States of India at 1586.1, rising steeply from 1342.5.[2][10] Delhi's crime rate was 4.1 times higher than the national average of 385.5 that year. States in Northeast India have consistently reported much lower crime rates, with 4 of the 5 states having the lowest crime in being from the region in 2018.

In terms of the absolute number of crimes in 2018, Uttar Pradesh reported the most (12.2% of nationally reported crime). Maharashtra, after topping the list over the previous 4-years, Kerala dropped to the third-position in absolute numbers, accounting for 10.1% of all crimes.

The violent crime rate (per 1,00,000 population) was highest in Assam (86.4), Tripura (62), Haryana (49.4), West Bengal (46.1) and Arunachal Pradesh (41.7). However, in terms of absolute number of cases, Uttar Pradesh reported the highest incidence of violent crimes accounting for 15.2% of total violent crimes in India (65,155 out of 4,28,134) followed by Maharashtra (10.7%), and Bihar and West Bengal each accounting for 10.4% of such cases.

Absolute number of reported crimes & crime rates across India[11]
State/UT 2016 2017 2018 2019 Percentage share of state/UT (2019) Crime rate in 2019 (IPC+SLL crimes)
India 4831515 5007044 5074635 5156172 100.0 385.5
Andhra Pradesh 129389 148002 144703 145751 2.8 278.6
Arunachal Pradesh 2700 2746 2817 2877 0.1 190.9
Assam 107014 109952 120572 123783 2.6 385.8
Bihar 189696 236055 262815 269109 5.2 224.0
Chhattisgarh 84192 90516 98233 96561 1.9 334.7
Goa 3706 3943 3884 3727 0.1 241.5
Gujarat 435422 334799 393194 431066 8.4 631.6
Haryana 143111 224816 191229 166336 3.2 577.4
Himachal Pradesh 17249 17796 19594 19924 0.4 272.4
Jammu and Kashmir 26624 25608 27276 25408 0.5 187.8
Jharkhand 47817 52664 55664 62206 1.2 165.5
Karnataka 179479 184063 163416 163691 3.2 248.1
Kerala 707870 653500 512167 453083 8.8 1287.7
Madhya Pradesh 365154 379682 405129 395619 7.7 478.9
Maharashtra 430866 467753 515674 509443 9.9 415.8
Manipur 4098 4250 3781 3661 0.1 117.7
Meghalaya 3582 3952 3482 3897 0.1 120.6
Mizoram 2800 2738 2351 2880 0.1 241.0
Nagaland 1908 1553 1775 1661 0.0 77.1
Odisha 103565 103866 107408 121525 2.4 277.9
Punjab 57739 70673 70318 72855 1.4 243.3
Rajasthan 251147 245553 250546 304394 5.9 392.3
Sikkim 1020 979 869 821 0.0 123.5
Tamil Nadu 467369 420876 499188 455094 8.8 600.3
Telangana 120273 133197 126858 131254 2.5 352.0
Tripura 4081 4238 6078 5988 0.1 149.6
Uttar Pradesh 494025 600082 585157 628578 12.2 278.2
Uttarakhand 16074 28861 34715 28268 0.5 252.8
West Bengal 204400 195537 188063 ***** 3.6 193.7
Andaman and Nicobar Islands 2491 3014 3699 4034 0.1 1013.6
Chandigarh 4256 5462 5967 4518 0.1 381.6
Dadra and Nagar Haveli 256 309 315 290 0.0 52.2
Daman and Diu 287 382 334 370 0.0 87.5
Delhi 216920 244714 262612 316261 5.2 1586.1
Lakshadweep 50 114 77 182 0.0 267.6
Puducherry 4885 4799 4674 4004 0.1 264.3
  • Due to non-receipt of data from West Bengal in time for 2019, data furnished for 2018 has been used

Sources :[2][3]

Cities Edit

Among metropolitan cities, Kolkata (103.4 in 2021) was the safest city, however, the experts doubted the accuracy of the data. After Kolkata, Pune (256.8) and Hyderabad (259.9) had the lowest crime rates (per 1 lakh urban population) among the 19-cities with more than two million inhabitants in India.[12] While almost all major cities have historically had a crime rate higher than that of their domain states, since 2018, Kolkata[13] and Mumbai (309.9) have been the only mega cities to have a lower crime rate than their states, West Bengal and Maharashtra respectively. Among other metropolises, Kozhikode (523.2) and Pune were the only ones to have a lower crime rate than their states.[14] It is generally acknowledged that cities have a greater propensity to crime and that megacities have a higher crime rate than smaller cities.

Delhi (1906.8)[15] remained the most crime ridden urban area in India for the fourth-year as of 2019. Over 82% of the 290,000 crimes in Delhi were thefts which jumped by more than 25% in 2019. In sharp contrast, thefts accounted for just a little over 20% of the 3.2 million crimes registered nationwide. Crime in the capital city has incrementally expanded over the previous years and jumped from 2018 when the rime rate was 1385.1.[16] Despite significantly reducing in scale, the crime rate in Kochi remained the second-highest at 1711.2, mainly due to Kochi Police booking the highest number of rash driving cases in their jurisdiction, 10508 separate cases in 2019.[17] Jaipur (1392.5) had the third-highest crime rate for the second-year, with crimes against women rising fast. The city had the highest rape rate of 35.6 per 100,000 population.[2][18]

Crimes against women Edit

Police records shows high incidence of crimes against women in India.[19] Sexual assault against women in India is increasingly common. Despite a large population, statistically sexual assault in India is not rampant.[19] According to the NCRB, as of 2018, the majority of crimes against women were registered under 'Cruelty by Husband or His Relatives' (31.9%) followed by 'Assault on Women with Intent to Outrage her Modesty' (27.6%), 'Kidnapping & Abduction of Women' (22.5%) and 'Rape' (10.3%). The crime rate per lakh women population was 58.8 in 2018, as compared to 57.9 in 2017.

Rape Edit

Rape in India has been described by Radha Kumar as one of India's most common crimes against women.[20] Official sources show that rape cases in India have doubled between 1990 and 2008.[21] While already on an upward curve, rape cases suddenly spiked in 2013.[22]

Disturbing incidents of rape on senior citizens[23] and infants[24] are increasingly common. The incidence of rape had gone up significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic in India.[25]

As of 2018, it was the fourth most common crime against women with the number of registered rape cases rising from 32,559 in 2017 to 33,356. Of these, 31,320 cases (93.9%) had a culprit who was known to the victim. The states which saw the highest absolute number of rapes were Madhya Pradesh (5,433 or 16.3% of all cases),[26] Rajasthan (4,355 or 13%), Uttar Pradesh (3,946 or 11.8%), Maharashtra (2,142 or 6.4%) and Chhattisgarh (2,091 or 6%).

In 2018, the national average rape rate (per 1,00,000 population) was 5.2, same as the previous year. Tamil Nadu (0.9), Nagaland (1.0) and Bihar (1.1) had the lowest rape rates while Chhattisgarh (14.7) had the highest rape rate.

Dowry Edit

Dowries are considered a major contributor towards the violence against women in India. Some of these offences include physical violence, emotional abuses, and murder of brides and girls.[27][28][29]

Most dowry deaths occur when the young woman, unable to bear the harassment and torture, commits suicide. Most of these suicides are by hanging, poisoning or by fire. Sometimes the woman is killed by setting her on fire – this is known as bride burning, and is sometimes disguised as suicide or accident.[30] In 2012, 8,233 dowry death cases were reported across India.[31] Dowry issues caused 1.4 deaths per year per 100,000 women in India.[32][33]

Domestic violence Edit

Domestic violence in India is endemic.[34] Around 70% of women in India are victims of domestic violence, according to Renuka Chowdhury, former Union minister for Women and Child Development.[35]

The National Crime Records Bureau reveals that a crime against a woman is committed every three minutes, a woman is raped every 29 minutes, a dowry death occurs every 77 minutes, and one case of cruelty committed by either the husband or relative of the husband occurs every nine minutes.[36] This occurs despite the fact that women in India are legally protected from domestic abuse under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act.[36]

Organised crime Edit

Human Trafficking Edit

Human trafficking in India is a serious issue. It usually comes in the form of offering employment to the poor and uneducated. Women are sold to brothels or families as maids, where they are usually raped, tortured and sexually assaulted. In 2021, India has passed a bill for fighting human trafficking.[37] According to National Crime Records Bureau, 2,189 cases of human trafficking were registered in 2021 as compared to 1,714 in 2020. Among states, Telangana(347) reported highest number of cases, followed by Maharashtra(320) and Assam(203). 1,21,351 children were missing as of 2021 data, many of them potential victims of human trafficking.[38]

Illegal drug trade Edit

India is located between two major illicit opium producing centres in Asia – the Golden Crescent comprising Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran and the Golden Triangle comprising Burma, Thailand and Laos.[39] Because of such geographical location, India experiences large amount of drug trafficking through the borders.[40] India is the world's largest producer of licit opium for the pharmaceutical trade.[41] But an undetermined quantity of opium is diverted to illicit international drug markets.[41]

India is a transshipment point for heroin from Southwest Asian countries like Afghanistan and Pakistan and from Southeast Asian countries like Burma, Laos, and Thailand.[42] Heroin is smuggled from Pakistan and Burma, with some quantities transshipped through Nepal.[42] Most heroin shipped from India are destined for Europe.[42] There have been reports of heroin smuggled from Mumbai to Nigeria for further export.[42]

In Maharashtra, Mumbai is an important centre for distribution of drug.[43] The most commonly used drug in Mumbai is Indian heroin (called desi mal by the local population).[43] Both public transportation (road and rail transportation) and private transportation are used for this drug trade.[43]

Drug trafficking affects the country in many ways.

  • Drug abuse: Cultivation of illicit narcotic substances and drug trafficking affects the health of the individuals and destroy the economic structure of the family and society.[44][45]
  • Organised crime: Drug trafficking results in growth of organised crime which affects social security. Organised crime connects drug trafficking with corruption and money laundering.[45]
  • Political instability: Drug trafficking also aggravates the political instability in North-West and North-East India.[46]

A survey conducted in 2003–2004 by Narcotics Control Bureau found that India has at least four million drug addicts.[47] The most common drugs used in India are cannabis, hashish, opium and heroin.[47] In 2006 alone, India's law enforcing agencies recovered 230 kg heroin and 203 kg of cocaine.[48] In an annual government report in 2007, the United States named India among 20 major hubs for trafficking of illegal drugs along with Pakistan, Afghanistan and Burma. However, studies reveal that most of the criminals caught in this crime are either Nigerian or US nationals.[49]

Several measures have been taken by the Government of India to combat drug trafficking in the country. India is a party of the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (1961), the Convention on Psychotropic Substances (1971), the Protocol Amending the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (1972) and the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (1988).[50] An Indo-Pakistani committee was set up in 1986 to prevent trafficking in narcotic drugs.[51] India signed a convention with the United Arab Emirates in 1994 to control drug trafficking.[51] In 1995, India signed an agreement with Egypt for investigation of drug cases and exchange of information and a memorandum of understanding of the Prevention of Illicit Trafficking in Drugs with Iran.[51]

Arms trafficking Edit

According to a joint report published by Oxfam, Amnesty International and the International Action Network on Small Arms (IANSA) in 2006, there are around 40 million illegal small arms in India out of approximately 75 million in worldwide circulation.[52] Majority of the illegal small arms make its way into the states of Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Orissa and Madhya Pradesh.[52] In UP, a used AK-47 costs $3,800 in black market.[53] Large amount of illegal small arms are manufactured in various illegal arms factories in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar and sold on the black market for as little as $5.08.[52]

Chinese pistols are in demand in the illegal small arms market in India because they are easily available and cheaper.[52] This trend poses a significant problem for the states of Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh which have influence of Naxalism.[52] The porous Indo-Nepal border is an entry point for Chinese pistols, AK-47 and M-16 rifles into India as these arms are used by the Naxalites who have ties to Maoists in Nepal.[52]

In North-East India, there is a huge influx of small arms due to the insurgent groups operating there.[54] The small arms in North-East India come from insurgent groups in Burma, black markets in Southeast Asia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka, black market in Cambodia, the People's Republic of China, insurgent groups like the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, the Communist Party of India (Maoist), the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre), Indian states like Uttar Pradesh and pilferages from legal gun factories, criminal organisations operating in India and South Asian countries and other international markets like Romania, Germany etc.[55] Illegal weaponry found in North-East India includes small arms such as the M14, M16, AK-47, AK-56, and the AK-74, but also light machine guns, Chinese hand grenades, mines, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and submachine guns etc.[56]

The Ministry of External Affairs and Ministry of Home Affairs drafted a joint proposal to the United Nations, seeking a global ban on small-arms sales to non-state users.[52]

Poaching and wildlife trafficking Edit

Illegal wildlife trade in India has increased.[57][58]

According to a report published by the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) in 2004, India is the chief target for the traders of wildlife skin.[59] Between 1994 and 2003, there have been 784 cases where the skins of tiger, leopard or otter have been seized.[59] Leopards, rhinoceros, reptiles, birds, insects, rare species of plants are being smuggled into the countries in Southeast Asia and the People's Republic of China.[57] Between 1994 and 2003, poaching and seizure of 698 otters have been documented in India.[59]

Kathmandu is a key staging point for illegal skins smuggled from India bound for Tibet and PRC.[59] The report by EIA noted there has been a lack of cross-border cooperation between India, Nepal and the People's Republic of China to coordinate enforcement operations and lack of political will to treat wildlife crime effectively.[59] The poaching of the Elephants is a significant problem in Southern India[60] and in the North-Eastern states of Nagaland and Mizoram.[61] The majority of tiger poaching happen in Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Orissa, West Bengal, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh.[62] There was a famous leopard poaching case at Mankulam in Kerala in 2020.[citation needed] Following is a comparison of reported cases of tiger and leopard poaching from 1998 to 2003:

Year 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
Reported cases of tiger poaching[63] 14 38 39 35 47 8
Reported cases of leopard poaching[63] 28 80 201 69 87 15

Samir Sinha, head of TRAFFIC India, the wildlife trade monitoring arm of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the World Conservation Union (IUCN), told Reuters in an interview "The situation regarding the illegal trade in wildlife parts in India is very grim. It is a vast, a varied trade ranging from smuggling of rare medicinal plants to butterflies to peafowl to tigers and it is difficult to predict how big it is, but the threats and dimensions suggest that the trade is increasing".[57]

Project Tiger, a wildlife conservation project, was initiated in 1972 and was launched by Indira Gandhi on 1 April 1973.[64] With 23 tiger reserves, Project Tiger claimed to have succeeded.[64] But according to critics like conservationist Billy Arjan Singh, temporary increases in tiger population were caused by immigration due to destruction of habitat in Nepal, not because of the widely acclaimed success of wildlife policy in India.[64]

Cyber crime Edit

The Information Technology Act 2000 was passed by the Parliament of India in May 2000, aiming to curb cyber crimes and provide a legal framework for e-commerce transactions.[65] However Pavan Duggal, lawyer of Supreme Court of India and cyber law expert, viewed "The IT Act, 2000, is primarily meant to be a legislation to promote e-commerce. It is not very effective in dealing with several emerging cyber crimes like cyber harassment, defamation, stalking and so on". Although cyber crime cells have been set up in major cities, Duggal noted the problem is that most cases remain unreported due to a lack of awareness.[66]

In 2001, India and United States had set up an India-US cyber security forum as part of a counter-terrorism dialogue.[67][68]

In 2021, according to NCRB data, 52,974 cyber crime cases were registered in India, a rise of 5% compared to 2020 (50,035) cases. Telangana reported highest number of cyber crimes in India with 10,303 cases, followed by Uttar Pradesh (8,829) and Karnataka (8,136) in the number of cyber crimes reported, while Karnataka registered highest number of cyber crimes against women.[69]

In 2021, the motive behind 60.8% of the cyber crimes was fraud, followed by sexual exploitation in 8.6% (4,555) cases and extortion in 5.4% (2,883) cases.[70]

India ranked second globally in terms of cyber crimes on health systems in 2021, according to a report by CloudSEK, a company which predicts cyber threats. The breached data included vaccination records, personally identifiable information, like name, address, email, contact number, and gender, and log in details of hospitals. Such attacks can also shut down equipment during surgery or in intensive care units.[71]

Corruption and police misconduct Edit

Corruption is widespread in India. It is prevalent within every section and every level of the society.[72] Corruption has taken the role of a pervasive aspect of Indian politics. In India, corruption takes the form of bribes, evasion of tax and exchange controls, embezzlement, etc.[73]

Despite state prohibitions against torture and custodial misconduct by the police, torture is widespread in police custody, which is a major reason behind deaths in custody.[74][75] The police often torture innocent people until a 'confession' is obtained to save influential and wealthy offenders.[76][73] G.P. Joshi, the programme coordinator of the Indian branch of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative in New Delhi comments that the main issue at hand concerning police violence is a lack of accountability of the police.[77]

In 2006, the Supreme Court of India in a judgment in the Prakash Singh vs. Union of India case, ordered central and state governments with seven directives to begin the process of police reform. The main objectives of this set of directives was twofold, providing tenure to and streamlining the appointment/transfer processes of policemen, and increasing the accountability of the police.[78]

In 2006, seven policemen were charge sheeted and eleven were convicted[9] for custodial misconduct. Jan Lokpal Bill is being planned to reduce the corruption.[79]

Other crimes Edit

Petty crime Edit

Petty crime, like pickpocketing, theft of valuables from luggage on trains and buses have been reported. Travelers who are not in groups become easy victims of pickpockets and purse snatchers. Purse snatchers work in crowded areas.[80]

Confidence tricks Edit

Many scams are perpetrated against foreign travellers, especially in Jaipur, the capital of Rajasthan.[81] Scammers usually target younger foreign tourists and suggest to them that money can be made by privately transporting gems or gold, or by taking delivery abroad of expensive carpets, avoiding customs duties.[81]

Such incidents occupy the traveller for several days. The traveller is then passed to a new scam artist who offers to show the foreign traveller the sights. Scam artists also offer cheap lodgings and meals to foreign travellers so they can place him or her in the scam artist's physical custody and thus make the foreigner vulnerable to threats and physical coercion. In the process, the foreigner loses his passport.[81]

Besides these, there are also unofficial guides to watch out for. They can be found all over India such as at crowded transportation hubs and at tourist attractions. A common ruse at transportation hubs is to claim that there is no train to your destination or to claim that a place is closed. The aim is to get you to take their expensive private transport or to an expensive hotel where they get a cut. As for the guides at tourist attractions, these could be temples, mosques, or places such as the Varanasi Ghat. You will end up receiving unsolicited services and then asked to pay a big tip for them.[82]

Taxi scam Edit

There are also taxi scams present in India, whereby a foreign traveller, who is not aware of the locations around Indian airports, is taken for a ride round the whole airport and charged for full-fare taxi ride while the terminal is only few hundred yards away.[80] Overseas Security Advisory Council in a report mentioned the process about how to avoid taxi-scam. This crime is known in other areas of the world as "long-hauling".[80]

Preventing crimes Edit

Crime prevention is critical to maintain law and order in the country. Deterring criminals through deployment of more police is one of the major strategy practised. However, their relationship is very complex. There are also other reasons such as unemployment, poverty, a lower per capita income which can affect the crime rates in India.[83]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "Crime in India 2021 - Statistics Volume 1" (PDF). National Crime Records Bureau.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Crime in India 2021 : Volume 1" (PDF). ncrb.gov.in. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Crime in India 2018 : Volume 1" (PDF). ncrb.gov.in. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  4. ^ "UNODC". Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  5. ^ a b "Crime Statistics 2021 Vol 3 - NCRB" (PDF).
  6. ^ (PDF). National Crime Records Bureau. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 8 November 2009.
  7. ^ "Central Government Act Section 445 in The Indian Penal Code". Indiankanoon.org. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  8. ^ a b c d Snapshots (1953—2006)[permanent dead link] National Crime Records Bureau
  9. ^ a b c d Snapshots – 2006[permanent dead link] National Crime Records Bureau
  10. ^ "Three rapes, 126 vehicle thefts per day in Delhi in 2019: NCRB". Hindustan Times. 1 October 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  11. ^ "Crime in India 2019 Volume 1" (PDF).
  12. ^ "NCRB Reports Says Kolkata Safest City in India; Experts Allege Suppression of Facts". The Wire. 31 August 2022.
  13. ^ "Kolkata safest city, crime rate down 31% in 4 years". The Times of India. 23 October 2019. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  14. ^ "An analysis of crime in India's largest urban agglomerations".
  15. ^ "Delhi crimes rose by over 20% against India's 3% in 2018–19, says NCRB data". Hindustan Times. 30 September 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  16. ^ "Delhi crime rate is 4 times of other metros". The Times of India. 10 January 2020. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  17. ^ "Kochi, Surat and Pune have the highest amount of rash driving in India : NCRB 2019 Report". timesofindiacom. 1 October 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  18. ^ "National Commission for Women raises red flag over rising crime against women in Jaipur". The Times of India. 4 October 2020. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  19. ^ a b Kalyani Menon-Sen, A. K. Shiva Kumar (2001). . United Nations. Archived from the original on 11 September 2006. Retrieved 24 December 2006.
  20. ^ Kumar, Radha (1993). The History of Doing: An Account of Women's Rights and Feminism in India. Zubaan. p. 128. ISBN 978-8185107769.
  21. ^ "Indian student gang raped and thrown under bus". Agence France-Presse. 17 December 2012.
  22. ^ "Sexual violence pandemic in India: Rape cases doubled in last 17 years". indiatoday.in. 13 December 2019. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  23. ^ "86-year-old woman raped in south west Delhi". The Times of India. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  24. ^ "Lucknow: 4-month-old baby dies after being raped by 30 yr old". The Times of India. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  25. ^ "Rape Cases Show No Signs of Stopping, Even As COVID-19 Cases Mount". shethepeople.tv. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  26. ^ "With 16% of entire nation's rape cases, Madhya Pradesh records highest number of rapes: NCRB report". timesnownews.com. 9 January 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  27. ^ Srinivasan, Padma; Gary R. Lee (2004). "The Dowry System in Northern India: Women's Attitudes and Social Change". Journal of Marriage and Family. 66 (5): 1108–1117. doi:10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00081.x.
  28. ^ Teays, Wanda (1991). "The Burning Bride: The Dowry Problem in India". Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion. 7 (2): 29–52.
  29. ^ Bloch, Francis; Vijayendra Rao (2002). "Terror as a Bargaining Instrument: A Case Study of Dowry Violence in Rural India" (PDF). The American Economic Review. 92 (4): 1029–1043. doi:10.1257/00028280260344588. hdl:10986/21580. S2CID 67819029.
  30. ^ Kumar, Virendra (February 2003). "Burnt wives". Burns. 29 (1): 31–36. doi:10.1016/s0305-4179(02)00235-8. PMID 12543042.
  31. ^ (PDF). National Crime Records Bureau, India. 16 January 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 June 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  32. ^ Provisional 2011 Census Data, Government of India (2011)
  33. ^ Crime statistics in India 29 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Government of India (2011)
  34. ^ Ganguly, Sumit. "India's Shame". The Diplomat. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  35. ^ Chowdhury, Renuka (26 October 2006). "India tackles domestic violence". BBC.
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IPC-Indian Penal Notes

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

crime, india, been, recorded, since, british, with, comprehensive, statistics, compiled, annually, national, crime, records, bureau, ncrb, under, ministry, home, affairs, india, crime, rate, india, 2021, crime, population, murder2, 1rape4, 8kidnapping7, 4death. Crime in India has been recorded since the British Raj with comprehensive statistics now compiled annually by the National Crime Records Bureau NCRB under the Ministry of Home Affairs India Crime rate in India 2021 crime per 100 000 population 1 Murder2 1Rape4 8Kidnapping7 4Death by road accidents10 1Dowry deaths1 0Grievous hurt6 6Sexual harassment2 6Human trafficking0 1Riots3 1Theft42 9Burglary7 2Extortion0 8Robbery2 1Forgery cheating amp fraud11 1Drugs trafficking2 4Illegal arms3 3Crimes against children33 6Cyber crime3 9Crimes against children rate is calculated per 100 000 children populationIn 2021 a total of 60 96 310 crimes comprising 36 63 360 Indian Penal Code IPC crimes and 24 32 950 Special and Local Laws SLL crimes were registered nationwide It is a 7 65 annual decrease from 66 01 285 crimes in 2020 the crime rate per 100 000 people has decreased from 487 8 in 2020 to 445 9 in 2021 but still significantly higher from 385 5 in 2019 2 3 In 2021 offences affecting the human body contributed 30 offences against property contributed 20 8 and miscellaneous IPC crimes contributed 29 7 of all cognizable IPC crimes 2 Murder rate was 2 1 per 100 000 kidnapping rate was 7 4 per 100 000 and rape rate was 4 8 per 100 000 in 2021 2 According to the UN the homicide rate was 2 95 per 100 000 in 2020 with 40 651 recorded down from a peak of 5 46 per 100 000 in 1992 and essentially unchanged since 2017 higher than most countries in Asia and Europe and lower than most in the Americas and Africa although numerically one of the highest due to the large population 4 Investigation rate is calculated as all cases disposed quashed or withdrawn by police as a percentage of total cases available for investigation The investigation rate of IPC crimes in India was 64 9 in 2021 5 Charge sheeting rate is calculated as all cases where charges were framed against accused as a percentage of total cases disposed after investigation The charge sheeting rate of IPC crimes in India was 72 3 in 2021 2 Conviction rate is calculated as all cases where accused was convicted by court after completion of a trial as a percentage of total cases where trial was completed The conviction rate of IPC crimes in India was 57 0 in 2021 5 In 2021 51 540 murders were under investigation by police of which charges were framed in 26 382 and 46 127 rapes were under investigation by police of which charges were framed in 26 164 2 In 2021 2 48 731 murders were under trial in courts of which conviction was given in 4 304 and 1 85 836 rapes were under trial in courts of which conviction was given in 3 368 2 The murder conviction rate was 42 4 and the rape conviction rate was 28 6 in 2021 2 Contents 1 Over time 2 Crime by location 2 1 Cities 3 Crimes against women 3 1 Rape 3 2 Dowry 3 3 Domestic violence 4 Organised crime 4 1 Human Trafficking 4 2 Illegal drug trade 4 3 Arms trafficking 5 Poaching and wildlife trafficking 6 Cyber crime 7 Corruption and police misconduct 8 Other crimes 8 1 Petty crime 8 2 Confidence tricks 8 3 Taxi scam 9 Preventing crimes 10 See also 11 Notes 12 Further reading 13 External linksOver time Edit nbsp Incidence of cognisable crimes in India 1953 2007 6 A report published by the NCRB compared the crime rates of 1953 and 2006 The report noted that burglary known as house breaking 7 in India declined over a period of 53 years by 79 84 from 147 379 a rate of 39 3 100 000 in 1953 to 91 666 a rate of 7 9 100 000 in 2006 murder has increased by 7 39 from 9 803 a rate of 2 61 in 1953 to 32 481 a rate of 2 81 100 000 in 2006 8 Kidnapping increased by 47 80 from 5 261 a rate of 1 40 100 000 in 1953 to 23 991 a rate of 2 07 100 000 in 2006 robbery declined by 28 85 from 8 407 rate of 2 24 100 000 in 1953 to 18 456 rate of 1 59 100 000 in 2006 and riots have declined by 10 58 from 20 529 a rate of 5 47 100 000 in 1953 to 56 641 a rate of 4 90 100 000 in 2006 8 In 2006 5 102 460 cognisable crimes were committed including 1 878 293 IPC crimes and 3 224 167 Special amp Local Laws SLL crimes with an increase of 1 5 over 2005 50 26 337 9 IPC crime rate in 2006 was 167 7 compared to 165 3 in 2005 showing an increase of 1 5 in 2006 over 2005 9 SLL crime rate in 2006 was 287 9 compared to 290 5 in 2005 showing a decline of 0 9 in 2006 over 2005 9 Year 8 Total cog crimes under IPC per 100 000 Murder per 100 000 Kidnapping per 100 000 Robbery per 100 000 Burglary known as house breaking in India per 100 0001953 160 5 2 61 1 40 2 24 39 32006 162 3 2 81 2 07 1 60 7 92 Change in 2006 over 1953 1 1 7 39 47 80 28 85 79 84SOURCE National Crime Records Bureau 8 Crime by location EditMain article List of states and union territories of India by crime rate As of 2019 Delhi had the highest crime rate incidence of crime per 100 000 population among all States of India at 1586 1 rising steeply from 1342 5 2 10 Delhi s crime rate was 4 1 times higher than the national average of 385 5 that year States in Northeast India have consistently reported much lower crime rates with 4 of the 5 states having the lowest crime in being from the region in 2018 In terms of the absolute number of crimes in 2018 Uttar Pradesh reported the most 12 2 of nationally reported crime Maharashtra after topping the list over the previous 4 years Kerala dropped to the third position in absolute numbers accounting for 10 1 of all crimes The violent crime rate per 1 00 000 population was highest in Assam 86 4 Tripura 62 Haryana 49 4 West Bengal 46 1 and Arunachal Pradesh 41 7 However in terms of absolute number of cases Uttar Pradesh reported the highest incidence of violent crimes accounting for 15 2 of total violent crimes in India 65 155 out of 4 28 134 followed by Maharashtra 10 7 and Bihar and West Bengal each accounting for 10 4 of such cases Absolute number of reported crimes amp crime rates across India 11 State UT 2016 2017 2018 2019 Percentage share of state UT 2019 Crime rate in 2019 IPC SLL crimes India 4831515 5007044 5074635 5156172 100 0 385 5Andhra Pradesh 129389 148002 144703 145751 2 8 278 6Arunachal Pradesh 2700 2746 2817 2877 0 1 190 9Assam 107014 109952 120572 123783 2 6 385 8Bihar 189696 236055 262815 269109 5 2 224 0Chhattisgarh 84192 90516 98233 96561 1 9 334 7Goa 3706 3943 3884 3727 0 1 241 5Gujarat 435422 334799 393194 431066 8 4 631 6Haryana 143111 224816 191229 166336 3 2 577 4Himachal Pradesh 17249 17796 19594 19924 0 4 272 4Jammu and Kashmir 26624 25608 27276 25408 0 5 187 8Jharkhand 47817 52664 55664 62206 1 2 165 5Karnataka 179479 184063 163416 163691 3 2 248 1Kerala 707870 653500 512167 453083 8 8 1287 7Madhya Pradesh 365154 379682 405129 395619 7 7 478 9Maharashtra 430866 467753 515674 509443 9 9 415 8Manipur 4098 4250 3781 3661 0 1 117 7Meghalaya 3582 3952 3482 3897 0 1 120 6Mizoram 2800 2738 2351 2880 0 1 241 0Nagaland 1908 1553 1775 1661 0 0 77 1Odisha 103565 103866 107408 121525 2 4 277 9Punjab 57739 70673 70318 72855 1 4 243 3Rajasthan 251147 245553 250546 304394 5 9 392 3Sikkim 1020 979 869 821 0 0 123 5Tamil Nadu 467369 420876 499188 455094 8 8 600 3Telangana 120273 133197 126858 131254 2 5 352 0Tripura 4081 4238 6078 5988 0 1 149 6Uttar Pradesh 494025 600082 585157 628578 12 2 278 2Uttarakhand 16074 28861 34715 28268 0 5 252 8West Bengal 204400 195537 188063 3 6 193 7Andaman and Nicobar Islands 2491 3014 3699 4034 0 1 1013 6Chandigarh 4256 5462 5967 4518 0 1 381 6Dadra and Nagar Haveli 256 309 315 290 0 0 52 2Daman and Diu 287 382 334 370 0 0 87 5Delhi 216920 244714 262612 316261 5 2 1586 1Lakshadweep 50 114 77 182 0 0 267 6Puducherry 4885 4799 4674 4004 0 1 264 3Due to non receipt of data from West Bengal in time for 2019 data furnished for 2018 has been usedSources 2 3 Cities Edit Among metropolitan cities Kolkata 103 4 in 2021 was the safest city however the experts doubted the accuracy of the data After Kolkata Pune 256 8 and Hyderabad 259 9 had the lowest crime rates per 1 lakh urban population among the 19 cities with more than two million inhabitants in India 12 While almost all major cities have historically had a crime rate higher than that of their domain states since 2018 Kolkata 13 and Mumbai 309 9 have been the only mega cities to have a lower crime rate than their states West Bengal and Maharashtra respectively Among other metropolises Kozhikode 523 2 and Pune were the only ones to have a lower crime rate than their states 14 It is generally acknowledged that cities have a greater propensity to crime and that megacities have a higher crime rate than smaller cities Delhi 1906 8 15 remained the most crime ridden urban area in India for the fourth year as of 2019 Over 82 of the 290 000 crimes in Delhi were thefts which jumped by more than 25 in 2019 In sharp contrast thefts accounted for just a little over 20 of the 3 2 million crimes registered nationwide Crime in the capital city has incrementally expanded over the previous years and jumped from 2018 when the rime rate was 1385 1 16 Despite significantly reducing in scale the crime rate in Kochi remained the second highest at 1711 2 mainly due to Kochi Police booking the highest number of rash driving cases in their jurisdiction 10508 separate cases in 2019 17 Jaipur 1392 5 had the third highest crime rate for the second year with crimes against women rising fast The city had the highest rape rate of 35 6 per 100 000 population 2 18 Crimes against women EditMain article Violence against women in India Police records shows high incidence of crimes against women in India 19 Sexual assault against women in India is increasingly common Despite a large population statistically sexual assault in India is not rampant 19 According to the NCRB as of 2018 the majority of crimes against women were registered under Cruelty by Husband or His Relatives 31 9 followed by Assault on Women with Intent to Outrage her Modesty 27 6 Kidnapping amp Abduction of Women 22 5 and Rape 10 3 The crime rate per lakh women population was 58 8 in 2018 as compared to 57 9 in 2017 Rape Edit Main article Rape in India Rape in India has been described by Radha Kumar as one of India s most common crimes against women 20 Official sources show that rape cases in India have doubled between 1990 and 2008 21 While already on an upward curve rape cases suddenly spiked in 2013 22 Disturbing incidents of rape on senior citizens 23 and infants 24 are increasingly common The incidence of rape had gone up significantly during the COVID 19 pandemic in India 25 As of 2018 it was the fourth most common crime against women with the number of registered rape cases rising from 32 559 in 2017 to 33 356 Of these 31 320 cases 93 9 had a culprit who was known to the victim The states which saw the highest absolute number of rapes were Madhya Pradesh 5 433 or 16 3 of all cases 26 Rajasthan 4 355 or 13 Uttar Pradesh 3 946 or 11 8 Maharashtra 2 142 or 6 4 and Chhattisgarh 2 091 or 6 In 2018 the national average rape rate per 1 00 000 population was 5 2 same as the previous year Tamil Nadu 0 9 Nagaland 1 0 and Bihar 1 1 had the lowest rape rates while Chhattisgarh 14 7 had the highest rape rate Dowry Edit Main article Dowry system in India Dowries are considered a major contributor towards the violence against women in India Some of these offences include physical violence emotional abuses and murder of brides and girls 27 28 29 Most dowry deaths occur when the young woman unable to bear the harassment and torture commits suicide Most of these suicides are by hanging poisoning or by fire Sometimes the woman is killed by setting her on fire this is known as bride burning and is sometimes disguised as suicide or accident 30 In 2012 8 233 dowry death cases were reported across India 31 Dowry issues caused 1 4 deaths per year per 100 000 women in India 32 33 Domestic violence Edit Further information Domestic violence in India Domestic violence in India is endemic 34 Around 70 of women in India are victims of domestic violence according to Renuka Chowdhury former Union minister for Women and Child Development 35 The National Crime Records Bureau reveals that a crime against a woman is committed every three minutes a woman is raped every 29 minutes a dowry death occurs every 77 minutes and one case of cruelty committed by either the husband or relative of the husband occurs every nine minutes 36 This occurs despite the fact that women in India are legally protected from domestic abuse under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act 36 Organised crime EditFurther information Organised crime in India Human Trafficking Edit Human trafficking in India is a serious issue It usually comes in the form of offering employment to the poor and uneducated Women are sold to brothels or families as maids where they are usually raped tortured and sexually assaulted In 2021 India has passed a bill for fighting human trafficking 37 According to National Crime Records Bureau 2 189 cases of human trafficking were registered in 2021 as compared to 1 714 in 2020 Among states Telangana 347 reported highest number of cases followed by Maharashtra 320 and Assam 203 1 21 351 children were missing as of 2021 data many of them potential victims of human trafficking 38 Illegal drug trade Edit India is located between two major illicit opium producing centres in Asia the Golden Crescent comprising Pakistan Afghanistan and Iran and the Golden Triangle comprising Burma Thailand and Laos 39 Because of such geographical location India experiences large amount of drug trafficking through the borders 40 India is the world s largest producer of licit opium for the pharmaceutical trade 41 But an undetermined quantity of opium is diverted to illicit international drug markets 41 India is a transshipment point for heroin from Southwest Asian countries like Afghanistan and Pakistan and from Southeast Asian countries like Burma Laos and Thailand 42 Heroin is smuggled from Pakistan and Burma with some quantities transshipped through Nepal 42 Most heroin shipped from India are destined for Europe 42 There have been reports of heroin smuggled from Mumbai to Nigeria for further export 42 In Maharashtra Mumbai is an important centre for distribution of drug 43 The most commonly used drug in Mumbai is Indian heroin called desi mal by the local population 43 Both public transportation road and rail transportation and private transportation are used for this drug trade 43 Drug trafficking affects the country in many ways Drug abuse Cultivation of illicit narcotic substances and drug trafficking affects the health of the individuals and destroy the economic structure of the family and society 44 45 Organised crime Drug trafficking results in growth of organised crime which affects social security Organised crime connects drug trafficking with corruption and money laundering 45 Political instability Drug trafficking also aggravates the political instability in North West and North East India 46 A survey conducted in 2003 2004 by Narcotics Control Bureau found that India has at least four million drug addicts 47 The most common drugs used in India are cannabis hashish opium and heroin 47 In 2006 alone India s law enforcing agencies recovered 230 kg heroin and 203 kg of cocaine 48 In an annual government report in 2007 the United States named India among 20 major hubs for trafficking of illegal drugs along with Pakistan Afghanistan and Burma However studies reveal that most of the criminals caught in this crime are either Nigerian or US nationals 49 Several measures have been taken by the Government of India to combat drug trafficking in the country India is a party of the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs 1961 the Convention on Psychotropic Substances 1971 the Protocol Amending the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs 1972 and the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances 1988 50 An Indo Pakistani committee was set up in 1986 to prevent trafficking in narcotic drugs 51 India signed a convention with the United Arab Emirates in 1994 to control drug trafficking 51 In 1995 India signed an agreement with Egypt for investigation of drug cases and exchange of information and a memorandum of understanding of the Prevention of Illicit Trafficking in Drugs with Iran 51 Arms trafficking Edit According to a joint report published by Oxfam Amnesty International and the International Action Network on Small Arms IANSA in 2006 there are around 40 million illegal small arms in India out of approximately 75 million in worldwide circulation 52 Majority of the illegal small arms make its way into the states of Bihar Chhattisgarh Uttar Pradesh Jharkhand Orissa and Madhya Pradesh 52 In UP a used AK 47 costs 3 800 in black market 53 Large amount of illegal small arms are manufactured in various illegal arms factories in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar and sold on the black market for as little as 5 08 52 Chinese pistols are in demand in the illegal small arms market in India because they are easily available and cheaper 52 This trend poses a significant problem for the states of Bihar Uttar Pradesh Jharkhand Chhattisgarh Orissa Maharashtra West Bengal Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh which have influence of Naxalism 52 The porous Indo Nepal border is an entry point for Chinese pistols AK 47 and M 16 rifles into India as these arms are used by the Naxalites who have ties to Maoists in Nepal 52 In North East India there is a huge influx of small arms due to the insurgent groups operating there 54 The small arms in North East India come from insurgent groups in Burma black markets in Southeast Asia Pakistan Bangladesh Nepal and Sri Lanka black market in Cambodia the People s Republic of China insurgent groups like the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam the Communist Party of India Maoist the Communist Party of Nepal Maoist Centre Indian states like Uttar Pradesh and pilferages from legal gun factories criminal organisations operating in India and South Asian countries and other international markets like Romania Germany etc 55 Illegal weaponry found in North East India includes small arms such as the M14 M16 AK 47 AK 56 and the AK 74 but also light machine guns Chinese hand grenades mines rocket propelled grenade launchers and submachine guns etc 56 The Ministry of External Affairs and Ministry of Home Affairs drafted a joint proposal to the United Nations seeking a global ban on small arms sales to non state users 52 Poaching and wildlife trafficking EditIllegal wildlife trade in India has increased 57 58 According to a report published by the Environmental Investigation Agency EIA in 2004 India is the chief target for the traders of wildlife skin 59 Between 1994 and 2003 there have been 784 cases where the skins of tiger leopard or otter have been seized 59 Leopards rhinoceros reptiles birds insects rare species of plants are being smuggled into the countries in Southeast Asia and the People s Republic of China 57 Between 1994 and 2003 poaching and seizure of 698 otters have been documented in India 59 Kathmandu is a key staging point for illegal skins smuggled from India bound for Tibet and PRC 59 The report by EIA noted there has been a lack of cross border cooperation between India Nepal and the People s Republic of China to coordinate enforcement operations and lack of political will to treat wildlife crime effectively 59 The poaching of the Elephants is a significant problem in Southern India 60 and in the North Eastern states of Nagaland and Mizoram 61 The majority of tiger poaching happen in Madhya Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Orissa West Bengal Assam and Arunachal Pradesh 62 There was a famous leopard poaching case at Mankulam in Kerala in 2020 citation needed Following is a comparison of reported cases of tiger and leopard poaching from 1998 to 2003 Year 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003Reported cases of tiger poaching 63 14 38 39 35 47 8Reported cases of leopard poaching 63 28 80 201 69 87 15Samir Sinha head of TRAFFIC India the wildlife trade monitoring arm of the World Wide Fund for Nature WWF and the World Conservation Union IUCN told Reuters in an interview The situation regarding the illegal trade in wildlife parts in India is very grim It is a vast a varied trade ranging from smuggling of rare medicinal plants to butterflies to peafowl to tigers and it is difficult to predict how big it is but the threats and dimensions suggest that the trade is increasing 57 Project Tiger a wildlife conservation project was initiated in 1972 and was launched by Indira Gandhi on 1 April 1973 64 With 23 tiger reserves Project Tiger claimed to have succeeded 64 But according to critics like conservationist Billy Arjan Singh temporary increases in tiger population were caused by immigration due to destruction of habitat in Nepal not because of the widely acclaimed success of wildlife policy in India 64 Cyber crime EditThe Information Technology Act 2000 was passed by the Parliament of India in May 2000 aiming to curb cyber crimes and provide a legal framework for e commerce transactions 65 However Pavan Duggal lawyer of Supreme Court of India and cyber law expert viewed The IT Act 2000 is primarily meant to be a legislation to promote e commerce It is not very effective in dealing with several emerging cyber crimes like cyber harassment defamation stalking and so on Although cyber crime cells have been set up in major cities Duggal noted the problem is that most cases remain unreported due to a lack of awareness 66 In 2001 India and United States had set up an India US cyber security forum as part of a counter terrorism dialogue 67 68 In 2021 according to NCRB data 52 974 cyber crime cases were registered in India a rise of 5 compared to 2020 50 035 cases Telangana reported highest number of cyber crimes in India with 10 303 cases followed by Uttar Pradesh 8 829 and Karnataka 8 136 in the number of cyber crimes reported while Karnataka registered highest number of cyber crimes against women 69 In 2021 the motive behind 60 8 of the cyber crimes was fraud followed by sexual exploitation in 8 6 4 555 cases and extortion in 5 4 2 883 cases 70 India ranked second globally in terms of cyber crimes on health systems in 2021 according to a report by CloudSEK a company which predicts cyber threats The breached data included vaccination records personally identifiable information like name address email contact number and gender and log in details of hospitals Such attacks can also shut down equipment during surgery or in intensive care units 71 Corruption and police misconduct EditMain article Corruption in India Corruption is widespread in India It is prevalent within every section and every level of the society 72 Corruption has taken the role of a pervasive aspect of Indian politics In India corruption takes the form of bribes evasion of tax and exchange controls embezzlement etc 73 Despite state prohibitions against torture and custodial misconduct by the police torture is widespread in police custody which is a major reason behind deaths in custody 74 75 The police often torture innocent people until a confession is obtained to save influential and wealthy offenders 76 73 G P Joshi the programme coordinator of the Indian branch of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative in New Delhi comments that the main issue at hand concerning police violence is a lack of accountability of the police 77 In 2006 the Supreme Court of India in a judgment in the Prakash Singh vs Union of India case ordered central and state governments with seven directives to begin the process of police reform The main objectives of this set of directives was twofold providing tenure to and streamlining the appointment transfer processes of policemen and increasing the accountability of the police 78 In 2006 seven policemen were charge sheeted and eleven were convicted 9 for custodial misconduct Jan Lokpal Bill is being planned to reduce the corruption 79 Other crimes EditPetty crime Edit Petty crime like pickpocketing theft of valuables from luggage on trains and buses have been reported Travelers who are not in groups become easy victims of pickpockets and purse snatchers Purse snatchers work in crowded areas 80 Confidence tricks Edit Many scams are perpetrated against foreign travellers especially in Jaipur the capital of Rajasthan 81 Scammers usually target younger foreign tourists and suggest to them that money can be made by privately transporting gems or gold or by taking delivery abroad of expensive carpets avoiding customs duties 81 Such incidents occupy the traveller for several days The traveller is then passed to a new scam artist who offers to show the foreign traveller the sights Scam artists also offer cheap lodgings and meals to foreign travellers so they can place him or her in the scam artist s physical custody and thus make the foreigner vulnerable to threats and physical coercion In the process the foreigner loses his passport 81 Besides these there are also unofficial guides to watch out for They can be found all over India such as at crowded transportation hubs and at tourist attractions A common ruse at transportation hubs is to claim that there is no train to your destination or to claim that a place is closed The aim is to get you to take their expensive private transport or to an expensive hotel where they get a cut As for the guides at tourist attractions these could be temples mosques or places such as the Varanasi Ghat You will end up receiving unsolicited services and then asked to pay a big tip for them 82 Taxi scam Edit There are also taxi scams present in India whereby a foreign traveller who is not aware of the locations around Indian airports is taken for a ride round the whole airport and charged for full fare taxi ride while the terminal is only few hundred yards away 80 Overseas Security Advisory Council in a report mentioned the process about how to avoid taxi scam This crime is known in other areas of the world as long hauling 80 Preventing crimes EditCrime prevention is critical to maintain law and order in the country Deterring criminals through deployment of more police is one of the major strategy practised However their relationship is very complex There are also other reasons such as unemployment poverty a lower per capita income which can affect the crime rates in India 83 See also Edit nbsp India portal nbsp Law portalLaw enforcement in India Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems Indian Penal Code Organised crime in India List of scandals in India Kala Kachcha gang Mafia Raj Caste related violence in India Religious violence in India Rape in IndiaNotes Edit Crime in India 2021 Statistics Volume 1 PDF National Crime Records Bureau a b c d e f g h i j Crime in India 2021 Volume 1 PDF ncrb gov in Retrieved 5 November 2022 a b Crime in India 2018 Volume 1 PDF ncrb gov in Retrieved 26 August 2020 UNODC Retrieved 20 January 2022 a b Crime Statistics 2021 Vol 3 NCRB PDF Incidence of cognizable crimes IPC under different crime heads during 1953 2007 PDF National Crime Records Bureau Archived from the original PDF on 19 June 2009 Retrieved 8 November 2009 Central Government Act Section 445 in The Indian Penal Code Indiankanoon org Retrieved 16 July 2015 a b c d Snapshots 1953 2006 permanent dead link National Crime Records Bureau a b c d Snapshots 2006 permanent dead link National Crime Records Bureau Three rapes 126 vehicle thefts per day in Delhi in 2019 NCRB Hindustan Times 1 October 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Crime in India 2019 Volume 1 PDF NCRB Reports Says Kolkata Safest City in India Experts Allege Suppression of Facts The Wire 31 August 2022 Kolkata safest city crime rate down 31 in 4 years The Times of India 23 October 2019 Retrieved 10 September 2020 An analysis of crime in India s largest urban agglomerations Delhi crimes rose by over 20 against India s 3 in 2018 19 says NCRB data Hindustan Times 30 September 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Delhi crime rate is 4 times of other metros The Times of India 10 January 2020 Retrieved 10 September 2020 Kochi Surat and Pune have the highest amount of rash driving in India NCRB 2019 Report timesofindiacom 1 October 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 National Commission for Women raises red flag over rising crime against women in Jaipur The Times of India 4 October 2020 Retrieved 4 October 2020 a b Kalyani Menon Sen A K Shiva Kumar 2001 Women in India How Freely How Equal United Nations Archived from the original on 11 September 2006 Retrieved 24 December 2006 Kumar Radha 1993 The History of Doing An Account of Women s Rights and Feminism in India Zubaan p 128 ISBN 978 8185107769 Indian student gang raped and thrown under bus Agence France Presse 17 December 2012 Sexual violence pandemic in India Rape cases doubled in last 17 years indiatoday in 13 December 2019 Retrieved 10 September 2020 86 year old woman raped in south west Delhi The Times of India Retrieved 9 September 2020 Lucknow 4 month old baby dies after being raped by 30 yr old The Times of India Retrieved 9 September 2020 Rape Cases Show No Signs of Stopping Even As COVID 19 Cases Mount shethepeople tv Retrieved 9 September 2020 With 16 of entire nation s rape cases Madhya Pradesh records highest number of rapes NCRB report timesnownews com 9 January 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Srinivasan Padma Gary R Lee 2004 The Dowry System in Northern India Women s Attitudes and Social Change Journal of Marriage and Family 66 5 1108 1117 doi 10 1111 j 0022 2445 2004 00081 x Teays Wanda 1991 The Burning Bride The Dowry Problem in India Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 7 2 29 52 Bloch Francis Vijayendra Rao 2002 Terror as a Bargaining Instrument A Case Study of Dowry Violence in Rural India PDF The American Economic Review 92 4 1029 1043 doi 10 1257 00028280260344588 hdl 10986 21580 S2CID 67819029 Kumar Virendra February 2003 Burnt wives Burns 29 1 31 36 doi 10 1016 s0305 4179 02 00235 8 PMID 12543042 National Crime Statistics page 196 PDF 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Wayback Machine People s Union for Civil Liberties a b Dr Vidyadevi Patil 2015 Social Problems in India Maharashtra Laxmi Book Publication p 29 Torture main reason of death in police custody The Tribune Custodial deaths in West Bengal and India s refusal to ratify the Convention against Torture Asian Human Rights Commission 26 February 2004 Custodial deaths and torture in India Asian Legal Resource Centre Police Accountability in India Policing Contaminated by Politics Archived from the original on 24 December 2010 Retrieved 2 February 2008 The Supreme Court takes the lead on police reform Prakash Singh vs Union of India CHRI Mumbai to join Hazare s fast today for Jan Lokpal a b c Crime amp Safety Report Chennai a b c India 2007 Crime amp Safety Report New Delhi 42 Tourist targeted scams in India Travelscams org Retrieved 4 June 2019 https bprd nic in WriteReadData userfiles file 202001020542373723554IndianPoliceJournal pdf page 15 IPC Indian Penal NotesFurther reading EditEdwardes S M 2007 Crime in India READ BOOKS ISBN 978 1 4067 6126 9 Broadhurst Roderic G Grabosky Peter N 2005 Cyber Crime The Challenge in Asia Hong Kong University Press ISBN 962 209 724 3 Menon Vivek 1996 Under Siege Poaching and Protection of Greater One Horned Rhinoceroses in India TRAFFIC International ISBN 1 85850 102 4 Vittal N 2003 Corruption in India The Roadblock to National Prosperity Academic Foundation ISBN 81 7188 287 0 Gupta K N 2001 Corruption in India Anmol Publications Pvt Ltd ISBN 81 261 0973 4 External links EditNational Crime Records Bureau Archived 20 June 2014 at the Wayback Machine Helpline numbers by Crime in Delhi http indianexpress com article explained ncrb data uttar pradesh crime rate up police 3033360 Crime in India 2010 statistics Crime rates in India State Wise New trends in drug trafficking India becoming hot bed for drug trafficking Expert Mumbai mafia is using more sophisticated weapons than police People Not Poaching The Communities and IWT Learning Platform 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