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India's best known cop, Kanwar Pal Singh Gill – credited with crushing insurgency in Punjab – hung up his holster on Friday.
The two-time Director General of Police (DGP) for Punjab, known for dealing with militants with an iron hand, died a quiet death in a Delhi hospital.
He was 82.
Gill, who succumbed to a kidney ailment in the Sir Ganga Ram Hospital on Friday, joined the Indian Police Service in 1958 and was assigned to Assam and Meghalaya, where he served for many years. He returned to his home state of Punjab in 1984.
Ramrod straight, and with a moustache that defied gravity, Gill was feared in some quarters as much as he was admired in others.
The detractors accused him of violating human rights in Punjab, as it reeled under militant violence in the 80’s and early 90’s. The supporters said it was the only way he could have tamed armed members of the Khalistan movement, waging a war for secession.
His curriculum vitae marked an equal number of highs and lows. In Assam, as in Punjab, he was known for his no-nonsense style of functioning, stamping out crime and insurgency with a heavy boot.
"Thousands of civilians and suspected militants were summarily executed in staged encounters," an HRW report said in 1991, accusing the police of using "increasingly brutal methods".
His finest moment, possibly, was in May 1988, when he commanded Operation Black Thunder to flush out militants holed up in the Golden Temple in Amritsar. The police action, and the decision to switch off water and electricity connections, led to the surrender of 67 people.
A practising Sikh, Gill ensured that during the operation, unlike the controversial Army-led Blue Star of 1984, the Sikh shrine was not touched.
Gill was then the toast of town – rather, of the country.
But the bureaucrat, Rupan Deol Bajaj, surprised Chandigarh's elite circles when she lodged a police complaint against him.
In an FIR on 28 July 1988, she alleged that the slap was the last straw. At one point, she said, he crooked a finger at her and said:
But Gill had his legion of friends, too – among them a stream of journalists. Fond of his evening drinks, he knew his Shakespeare and loved Urdu ghazals. An old acquaintance recalls how he could spend an entire night talking about music, while quaffing beer.
An officer known to lead from the front, he was admired by the rank for his leadership qualities, and the fact that he stood by them.
(With inputs from PTI)
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