40% CCTV cameras installed by Hyderabad police defunct till Aug. 2 last year: RTI data
The Hindu
HYDERABAD
A little over 40% of the CCTV cameras installed in public places under the Hyderabad police limits were either not working or were under maintenance till August 2, 2022, a Right to Information (RTI) request has revealed.
According to data shared by city-based RTI activist S.Q. Masood on Twitter, the information was received via a letter dated August 2, 2022, in which the police specified that the CCTV cameras storage capacity was a minimum of 30 days. These cameras were installed as per the Telangana Public Safety Measures Enforcement Act, 2013 and rules of 2014.
“According to the information given by the police, there were 10,597 CCTV cameras installed till the date of information which is August 2 last year. The CCTV cameras which were not working, according to the information, are 4,402. It took me two years of following up, and appealing, to get the information,” Mr Masood said.
The Madras High Court on Tuesday, June 11, 2024, rejected a plea by former special Director General of Police (DGP) Rajesh Das to restore the electricity service connection to a bungalow in Thaiyur near Kelambakkam in Chengalpattu district, and to restrain Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation (Tangedco) officials from disturbing the power supply in future.
The Madras High Court on Tuesday, June 11, 2024, permitted Anna University to deposit, in three monthly instalments, an amount of ₹73.23 lakh before the Central Government Industrial Tribunal (CGIT) as a condition to hear a statutory appeal preferred by the varsity against the Coimbatore Regional Provident Fund (RPF) Commissioner’s order to pay dues to the tune of ₹2.44 crore to contract employees.