By Aryavarth Bureau | Bengaluru (Marathahalli)
Bengaluru, once known as India’s Silicon Valley, is now earning notoriety not just for traffic jams and potholes — but for the horrifying brutality of its police. A shocking incident at Marathahalli Police Station has exposed the rot that has set deep inside Karnataka’s bureaucracy.
A 33-year-old woman, Nandini (name changed), was summoned to the police station over a petty business dispute involving her husband. When her husband failed to “cooperate” as per the officers’ expectation, Nandini was also called in. What followed was sheer horror — she was detained illegally and subjected to mental and physical torture throughout the night, over a minor ₹1 lakh internal bank transfer that had no link to the case.
In tears, Nandini said, “I was stopped at the station without any evidence or investigation and was tortured in multiple ways. That night was the most terrifying of my life. I’ve completely lost faith in the city’s police.”
Police Stations Have Become Extortion Centers, Not Public Service Units
A survey conducted by The Aryavarth Express has revealed damning results — 96% of people across the country believe the bureaucracy is “deeply corrupt and unaccountable.”
Citizens allege that police stations now function as “collection centers” rather than institutions of justice.
Vikas (name changed) from Malleswaram shared, “I went to file a land dispute complaint, but the officer demanded money. When I refused, he said my complaint was baseless and refused to file it. I eventually had to bribe them to register the case.”
Governments Have Failed — Bureaucracy Has Gone Rogue
Both the Central and State governments have utterly failed to curb corruption in the system. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s promise during demonetization — to eliminate black money and bring transparency — remains unfulfilled in police departments, where under-the-table transactions are still rampant.
The Karnataka government, too, seems powerless. The bureaucracy and police act with complete impunity.
This raises a disturbing question — Is the government now serving the bureaucracy, rather than the other way around?
Growing Insecurity — Women Losing Faith in Police
Women in Bengaluru now fear going to police stations, even to seek justice. Cases of police harassment, abuse, and extortion are increasing by the day. This not only shatters public faith but also tarnishes India’s global reputation. A recent survey revealed that foreign tourist arrivals have dropped sharply in the last decade — due to the perception of India as unsafe and lawless.
Transfers Are Not Punishment — They’re Cover-Ups
A senior police officer admitted off-record that “transfers” are often used as cosmetic measures to deflect attention from wrongdoing.
Experts argue that officers involved in such heinous acts must be immediately suspended and prosecuted, not relocated.
If strict punishment isn’t enforced, public trust in the police will collapse — leaving behind a state ruled by fear, corruption, and lawlessness.
