Strongly defending the police action in handling the massive protests after the incident, the Police Commissioner, who will retire this month end, said he was personally targeted during his tenure but ruled out involvement of politicians in the campaign aimed at removing him.
The outgoing Commissioner counts bringing professionalism into his over 80,000-strong force and cracking of a number of high-profile cases including the spot fixing scandal, as his major achievements during his 13 month-long stint as head of the force.
Asked to identify the people, who he feels had hatched a conspiracy to target him during his tenure, Kumar, a 1976-batch IPS officer, refused to name them but said they were not politicians.
"I will not give their names just now.... They are not politicians," he told PTI in an interview. Kumar, however, indicated that he may name them once he demits office.
"It is misconception that we did not handle the (protests) well. Throughout the day we tried to persuade them, we tried to request them to disperse. We fired teargas shells, we fired water canons several times.
"It was a leaderless crowd. Lumpen elements had begun to hijack the entire campaign. So we had to take action...We had no option. When all other options failed, we resorted to cane charge and the crowd melted away," he said.
