12 held in illegal arms procurement
Hyderabad: City police on Monday nabbed an ex- service man and 11 armed private security personnel belonging to Uttar Pradesh and Bihar on charge of illegally possessing firearms procured through fake arms licenses. The ex-army man T Prakash Babu, who runs a private security agency here and provides armed security guards to different private security agencies, has been apprehended along with 11 private security guards, Hyderabad Police Commissioner A K Khan told reporters here. Taskforce sleuths seized 35 guns and 38 live rounds from them that were procured through fake armed licenses, he said.
Prakash Babu earlier worked as a Special Police Officer (SPO) in 2008 and after leaving the job established a security agency and was outsourcing 60 armed security guards to other security agencies after taking commissions from them, the senior police officer said. During enquiry it has been revealed that most of the armed security personnel outsourced by Babu were possessing weapons that were obtained through fake arms licenses, Khan said, adding none of these weapons were registered with Hyderabad City Police.
Special teams have left for Bihar and Uttar Pradesh to obtain recorded evidence. There are around 4,000 arms license holders in Hyderabad and police has already launched verification process and issued show cause notices besides cancelling arms licenses in certain cases, he said. Khan said weapon holders under the sports category were also under scanner and thorough checking of the issuance certificates is on.
In a similar case, as many as 14 arms licenses out of 16 – all taken from Nagaland by people from Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra were found to be false and a case was registered in the year 2003. However, the police failed to file a charge-sheet even after eight years and the accused managed to get their weapons released from the court and disappeared.Why is it important for Security Professionals?
· All security agencies have a Social Responsibility of preventing the proliferation of Fake Arms Licenses and Illegal Weapons.
· If they fail, they carry the vicarious liability and will face prosecution and / or arrest by the Law Enforcement Agencies.
· The client’s confidence and trust on the Security Agency must be lived up to.
Where does the problem lie?
· PSAR Act 2005 read in conjunction with MHA Notification of 1987, empowers State Arms Licensing Authorities to grant Arms Licenses to Security Companies so that they can buy the number of guns required for business needs and employ “Retainers” as Armed Guards.
· However, NO State Government has taken note – so Private Security Agencies are not getting the licenses to buy the weapons they require to meet bona fide business needs.
· So what do they do? They look for a ‘gunman’ and employ him to meet a contract, in the process failing to check the legal status of the license/weapon/licensee. This is further exacerbated by the urgency conveyed by the client(s).
· Result – proliferation of illegal weapons/licenses. Police blame Security Companies, Security Companies look heavenward..
What can we do?
· Collectively evolve a “Code of Conduct” for Private Security Agencies of India and make all PSAs signatories to the same. Thereafter, offenders would be ‘black listed’ by the Industry.
· Request the Government to suitably correct the modalities for grant of arms licenses, in a way that legitimate business needs are met – thus eliminating the business opportunity of those wanting to make illegitimate business out of the void.