New Delhi, Sep 14 (IANS) The Supreme Court is slated to hear on Monday a suo motu case registered over the lack of functional CCTV cameras in police stations across the country.
A Bench of Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta took cognisance of a media report which revealed that 11 people had died in police custody in Rajasthan in the first eight months of 2025, seven of them in the Udaipur division alone.
“We have come across a disturbing news article… The news article reveals that there have been 11 deaths in police custody in the State of Rajasthan in the past 8 months in the year of 2025, 7 of these unfortunate incidents happened in the Udaipur Division itself,” the Justice Nath-led Bench noted in its order passed on September 4.
The news report also pointed out that many remand rooms in police stations are outside the range of CCTV cameras and that police often withhold footage citing technical faults, lack of storage, ongoing investigations or legal restrictions.
In some cases, the police simply refused to share the footage or delayed its release.
“We, therefore, take suo motu cognizance of the aforesaid news article under the heading ‘In Re: Lack of functional CCTVs in Police Stations’ and direct the Registry to place these proceedings before Hon’ble the Chief Justice of India for appropriate follow-up action,” the Justice Nath-led Bench had ordered.
The Supreme Court has already mandated the installation of CCTV cameras in police stations to maintain transparency and to curb instances of custodial torture. It had directed that no part of a police station be left uncovered and that footage be preserved for at least 18 months in digital or network video recorders.
In 2023, the apex court had given the Centre and states a “last chance” to comply within three months. It had also made station house officers (SHOs) personally responsible for maintenance, data backup and repair of CCTV systems.
--IANS
pds/dpb
You may also like
'They will not pass': Madrid pro-Palestine protests halt Vuelta a España cycle race; over 1 lakh people on streets
Owen Cooper's first words after making history as youngest male acting Emmy winner
We became villains for just doing our duty, say Nepal cops
Watch: Emotional farewell to Charlie Kirk at Washington memorial; hundreds mourn
'Would love to retire as Sundar': Taarak Mehta Ka Ooltah Chashmah's Mayur Vakani opens up about retirement and life beyond the show