Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first specific Jammu & Kashmir police force came into existence in the year 1873 with one police officer known as Kotwal and 14 Thanedars for Srinagar City.This police force would control crime and take care of law and order situations with help of Chowkidars and Harkars, who were paid mandatorily by the residents of Imperial Kashmir Union.
Jammu and Kashmir Police: Posthumous Constable: Vinod Kumar CRPF: Posthumous Head Constable: Shyam Narain Singh Yadava CRPF: Posthumous Inspector: Pintu Kumar Singh CRPF: Posthumous Deputy Commandant: Rahul Mathur: CRPF: Subedar: Sanjiv Kumar Thakur: 4 Para (SF) Posthumous 2020 Head Constable: Abdul Rashid Kalas Jammu and Kashmir Police: Posthumous
Police career: Department: Jammu and Kashmir Police: Service years: 1999–2020: ... After completing his education, he was assigned as a constable in the J&K Police ...
Jammu and Kashmir Police: Posthumous Head Constable: Shyam Narain Singh Yadava CRPF: Posthumous Inspector: Pintu Kumar Singh CRPF: Posthumous Deputy Commandant: Rahul Mathur CRPF: Subedar: Sanjeev Kumar: 4 Para (SF) Posthumous: 2020 Head Constable: Abdul Rashid Kalas Jammu and Kashmir Police: Posthumous 2019 Constable: Pradip Kumar Panda CRPF ...
On 3 January 2018, a BSF head constable was killed as a result of ceasefire violation in Samba sector of Jammu and Kashmir. [155] On 4 January 2018, Pakistani media reported that three Pakistani civilians were injured as a result of ceasefire violation in Sialkot's Zafarwal sector. [156]
The 2014 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election was held in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir in five phases from 25 November – 20 December 2014. Voters elected 87 members to the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly, which ends its six-year term on 19 January 2020. The results were declared on 23 December 2014.
However, when the insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir broke out in 1989, it moved towards the state and handed over the operations in Punjab to CRPF and local police. In Jammu and Kashmir, the state police and the thinly-deployed Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) struggled to cope with the torturous violence, so it was deployed to combat these.
The state police is headed by an Indian Police Service officer with the rank of Director General of Police (DGP), assisted by one or more Additional Directors General of Police (ADGs). Other DG rank officers head autonomous bodies not controlled by the DGP, such as the police recruitment board, fire service and police training.