ADVT:

  Home   Astrology   Business   Indiafocus   Lifestyle   Movies   News   Parenting   Online Exam   Sports   Travel

News HomeIndiaNational
The rise and fall of ACP Rajbir Singh
Tuesday, March 25, 2008 12:06 [IST]

New Delhi: His rise from a sub inspector to a high-profile assistant commissioner of police was as sensational as the violent end to his life.

Delhi Police's encounter specialist Rajbir Singh was murdered on Monday night - ending a career that was as controversial as it was illustrious. ACP Rajbir Singh, who was allegedly shot dead by a property dealer in the suburb of Gurgaon, had courted many controversies during his otherwise remarkable career that began in 1982 when he entered the Delhi Police as a sub inspector.

Shunted out of the Crime Branch following his alleged links with a drug mafia and touted as a property grabber, Rajbir Singh last year returned as the head of the newly-established Special Operation Squad, a special anti-terror cell. Rajbir, who had over 50 kills to his credit, had become the face of counter-terrorism operations in the capital.

He was the man instrumental in cracking the attack on parliament in 2001 and the Red Fort in 2000. Rajbir was the only officer in the police history to be promoted to the rank of ACP in just 13 years. His first brush with fame came in 1994 with the arrest of notorious criminal Virendera Jat following which he was promoted to the rank of inspector. The next big ticket targets were gangsters Rajbir Ramola and Ranpal Gujjar. He was then posted as ACP (operations) in west district.

"Rajbir Singh was an able police officer of the Delhi Police and had two promotions during his career," ACP Rajan Baghat said. The word encounter entered the lexicon in the mid-1990s when gangsters from western Uttar Pradesh began making forays into the capital. Rajbir was among the most prominent encounter specialists at the time.

He came into the limelight on November 3, 2002, when he allegedly killed two terrorists in the basement of Ansal Plaza shopping mall in south Delhi. A man, Hari Krishna, who claimed he saw the deaths labelled it fake. Later, suspicions were raised about the genuineness of the operations supervised by him.

Rajbir's alleged links with a drug trafficker came to the fore after a telephonic conversation between them - tapped by the narcotics wing - was leaked to the media. An inquiry headed by the joint commissioner of police (Vigilance) was ordered. The Delhi High Court also issued notices to him and other officers on charges that he and his colleagues manhandled some people in west Delhi's Kirti Nagar in connection with a property dispute.

Despite the many controversies, Rajbir was not shifted out of the Special Cell. But circumstances, and maybe one of the many controversies that dogged him, caught up with him Monday night.


Source : IANS

Add To

digg.com

del.icio.us

stumbleupon.com

My Yahoo

reditt.com

newsvine.com

fark.com
 Post Your Feedback   
Name
Email ID
Comments
 Other Features
News today
Readers speak
Public opinion
Print this page
Mail this page
Archives
Columns


  
More News
Court reserves order on...
Kandhamal turns into fortress...
2 NATO soldiers killed in...
US congratulates Zadari
Russia accuses West of...
Left says Black Day for India
President congratulates PM for...
Space probe completes asteroid...
Chiranjeevi accused of...
Police fire on Kashmir...
18 Egyptians killed in rock...
NRI doctor banned from...
'NSG waiver a victory of PM's...
15 killed in Afghan...
Dalai Lama's eldest brother...
Fn anomalies in Mid-Day Meal...
Landslide in Philippines
From Mr 10 per cent to Pak...
Heroin worth Rs 2.8 crore...
NSG waiver historic and victory...
3 workers killed in reactor...