Misunderstandings are the staple of comedies, but they also happen in real life and not always to comedic
effect, as this story from Mumbai shows.
So many men travel by the ladies’ compartments in local trains while the Government Railway Police (GRP) look the other way.
But when the GRP did decide to act, the man at the receiving end turned out to be the train’s guard who had come to investigate a chain-pulling incident.
The incident occurred on Sunday night at Vasai. The guard, Mohammad Yasin Sheikh, 40, was badly injured after being beaten up by five GRP personnel. He is being treated at Western Railway’s Jagjivan Ram Hospital at Mumbai Central. [Link]
The policemen obviously didn't follow the GRP's Official Rules of Conduct, specifically Rule 5 in Section 3: Always attempt to identify a lawbreaker before beating him up.
On Sunday, Sheikh was on duty on a Virar-bound local when he noticed a signal that the emergency chain had been pulled by someone in the ladies’ compartment. When the local reached Vasai at 10.39 pm, he got down to investigate.
Sheikh said, “We are supposed to go to the compartment in which the chain was pulled and verify the complaint of the passengers. But as I was getting into the ladies’ compartment, the GRP constable on escort duty objected. Before I could explain, he slapped me. I fell on the platform.”
The GRP man then called a few colleagues from other platforms to help him deal with Sheikh. According to the guard, the five men beat him up without giving him a chance to explain himself. “I tried to reveal my identity but the GRP men did not allow me to speak. They kicked me and hit me with the butt of their guns,” said Sheikh. [Link]
The policemen are in trouble, of course. Not only did they break Rule 5 in Section 3, they also violated Rule 7 in Section 6: Railway personnel must not be beaten up under any circumstances, except with prior approval of the commissioner.
Photo by Marc van der Chijs

It is indeed a shame that happens ever so often. And trains are just one of the many places one gets to witness frustration, of a hot-headed mindless crowd, vented out on a potential criminal. Be it in a ladies compartment or a richly guarded crowded community place, the mad bashing funnily comes to an end when the 'affected' can take the sight no more and stops it.
Posted by: di | October 28, 2007 at 10:21 PM