Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
India

Former Punjab DGP KPS Gill Dies At 82

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 May, 2017 10:06 AM

    Former Punjab top cop K.P.S. Gill, who is credited with having played a big role in eliminating terrorism from Punjab, died here in a private hospital. He was 82.

     

    Gill, a former Director General of Punjab Police, was suffering from end-stage kidney failure and significant ischemic heart disease.

     

    "He had been recovering from peritonitis but died of sudden cardiac arrest due to cardiac arrhythmia", said a statement from Sir Gangaram Hospital where he was undergoing treatment. He died at 2.55 p.m.

     

    He was admitted to the hospital on May 18.

     

    Gill, who was known as 'supercop', was DGP of Punjab Police between 1988 and 1990 and came back to the post again in 1991 and held it till retirement in 1995.

     

    Gill was also president of the Institute for Conflict Management and president of the Indian Hockey Federation (IHF).

     

    He received the Padma Shri in 1989 for his work in civil service.

     
     

    Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Friday offered his condolence on the death of former state DGP KPS Gill, recalling his invaluable contribution to bringing peace back to the state from the grip of militancy.

     

    The chief minister said Gill’s role in restoring peace and stability to Punjab cannot be undermined or forgotten, and he continues to be emulated by police and security personnel around the country, as an example of how the most complex of problems can be resolved with grit and determination.

     
     

    Expressing his heartfelt sympathies for the bereaved family, the chief minister said his thoughts and prayers were with them in their hour of grief.

     

    State Health Minister Brahm Mohindra also expressed profound grief and sorrow over the sad demise of KPS Gill.

     

    In a condolence message, Mohindra said KPS Gill was a committed and decorated police officer who served twice as the Director General of Police in Punjab. He termed KPS Gill as an honest, brave, highly efficient and upright officer.

     
     

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi offered his condolences on Twitter and said Gill would be remembered for his service to the nation.

     

    He was called the super cop for his work in Punjab, where he was the Director General of Police from 1988 to 1990 and then again from 1991 until his retirement from the Indian Police Service in 1995.

     
     
     
     

    Kanwar Pal Singh Gill: The 'SUPERCOP' Who Led From The Front 

     

    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.

     

    Ramrod straight, and with a moustache that defied gravity, KPS 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 eighties and early nineties. The supporters said it was the only way he could have tamed armed members of the Khalistan movement, waging a war for secession.

     

    Gill, who succumbed to kidney ailment in the Sir Ganga Ram Hospital on Friday, joined the Indian Police Service in 1958 and was posted in Assam and Meghalaya, where he served for 29 years. He returned to his home state of Punjab in 1984.

     
     
     
    Post-retirement, he was appointed security adviser to the Gujarat government after the 2002 violence, and was adviser to Chhattisgarh in 2006.

     

    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.

     

    But while he was credited with rooting out insurgency in Punjab, international rights groups such as Human Rights Watch (HRW) accused him of violating people’s rights.

     

     

    “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 persons.

     

    A practising Sikh, Gill ensured that during the operation, unlike the controversial Army-led ‘Blue Star’ of 1984, the Sikh shrine was not touched.

     

     

    No stranger to controversy, Gill was convicted of sexual harassment in 1996 for molesting a civil servant. She had accused him of slapping her bottom at a party in Chandigarh on July 18, 1988.

     

    The 'Supercop' 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 July 28, 1988, she alleged that the slap was the last straw. At one point, she said, he crooked a finger at her and said: “You get up. Come with me.”

     

    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 author and seen widely as an expert on counter-terrorism, the Padma Shri awardee was also the president of the Institute for Conflict Management and of the Indian Hockey Federation.

     

    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.

     
     

    A Punjab watcher recalls how, once while trying to enter a trench, he refused to crawl into the tunnel.

     

    “Sir, you will be targeted,” a junior officer said.

     

    “A janrail (Punjabi for General) never bends,” he replied.

     

    MORE India ARTICLES

    'We Are Here To Stay', Says Indian-Americans On Growing Hate Crimes

    'We Are Here To Stay', Says Indian-Americans On Growing Hate Crimes
    "We are here to stay", Indian- Americans have vowed while holding a series of meetings to express their concern over growing hate crime incidents against ethnic and religious minorities in the US.

    'We Are Here To Stay', Says Indian-Americans On Growing Hate Crimes

    Two Major Road Accidents : Punjab CM Amarinder Singh Orders Crackdown On Over-Speeding Vehicles

    Two Major Road Accidents : Punjab CM Amarinder Singh Orders Crackdown On Over-Speeding Vehicles
    The Chief Minister further asked the transport department to examine the feasibility of installing speed governors in public transport.

    Two Major Road Accidents : Punjab CM Amarinder Singh Orders Crackdown On Over-Speeding Vehicles

    Home Buyers, Tenants From Lower Mainland Moving To Outlying Areas To Live

    Home Buyers, Tenants From Lower Mainland Moving To Outlying Areas To Live
    David Repa recalls the shock he felt sitting down at a bank after selling his Vancouver business in 2013 and realizing for the first time how much of "a joke" his prospects were of owning a home in the city.

    Home Buyers, Tenants From Lower Mainland Moving To Outlying Areas To Live

    India Will Be The World's Youngest Country By 2020

    India Will Be The World's Youngest Country By 2020
    India will become the world's youngest country by 2020 with an average age of 29, India's envoy in Sri Lanka said on Sunday.

    India Will Be The World's Youngest Country By 2020

    Robbers Loot Rs. 25 Lakh In Cash From Delivery Company Office In Delhi

    Robbers Loot Rs. 25 Lakh In Cash From Delivery Company Office In Delhi
    A group of six masked men barged into the office of a private goods delivery company in east Delhi's Patparganj area and decamped with Rs. 25 lakh in cash, police said on Sunday.

    Robbers Loot Rs. 25 Lakh In Cash From Delivery Company Office In Delhi

    Punjab Assembly Session Begins, Badals Absent

    Punjab Assembly Session Begins, Badals Absent
    Protem Speaker Rana K.P. Singh said that 115 of the 117 legislators took oath on Friday.

    Punjab Assembly Session Begins, Badals Absent