Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI), the body which conducted the study, will release its full findings tomorrow in the presence of Minister of State for Home Affairs Kiren Rijiju here.
The study titled--Rough Roads to Equality - Women Police in South Asia-- puts the total number of women in police forces, across states in India, at 1,05,325. The overall strength (civil and armed) on the other hand stands at 22,83,646.
Other South Asian Countries that were part of the study were Bangladesh, Maldives and Pakistan while Kerala, Haryana, Meghalaya, Rajasthan and Jharkhand were the Indian states.
Devika Prasad, coordinator of the study team, said the pace of change in the policing structure was "glacial" and attributed it to condoning the demand for a "common cadre" for recruitment of men and women among other factors.
She said the systemic deficiencies in terms of infrastructure namely lack of ladies toilets were also among the major hindrances in increasing the abysmally low presence of women.
Former DG NHRC Kanwaljit Deol, former Kerala top cop Jacob Punnoose, and former director of National Police Academy Kamal Kumar were also part of the initiative.
Among Indian states, Chandigarh tops the chart with 14.16 per cent women in police force while Assam is at the bottom with just 0.93 per cent.
"The general perception maybe that women need policing. But the fact is policing needs women more because of the unique sets of skills and personalities they bring to the table namely patience, compassion, sincerity, empathy and devotion," Kumar said.
He also lamented the lack of efforts towards "mainstreaming" women, and slammed the prevailing practises of restricting women by assigning them duties such as escorting women prisoners and interrogating women suspects among others.
