It is a pity that in almost all the provinces of the country, IGPs seldom complete their stint in office and are booted out after only a couple of months of their posting. Why they soon fall foul of the CM and his cabinet ministers is not difficult to fathom. Our political culture has become so much corrupt that the so-called elected representatives of the people treat the IGPs as their personal servants and expect them to carry out their fiats, no matter, whether they are legal or illegal. Obviously, those police officers who are down_to_earth , straightforward and stickler for rules refuse to dance to their tune and thus very soon lose favour of their political masters who then take no time in getting rid of them. Frequent changes in the police department at the highest level demolarise the police force which , then adversely affects the law and order of the country.
The government has been finding it exceedingly difficult to convince the common man about its innocence in the recent atta and sugar crises. This crises has affected all and sundry in the country , particularly, the salaried class. One remembers the time when Iran was in severe financial constraint but it goes to the credit of Imam Khomeni that he managed a system under which throughout Iran neither the weight of loaf was reduced nor any increase in its rate was allowed because Imam Khomeni believed that a loaf of bread is the only cheapest food with which the common man fills his stomach and if its rate was increased the danger is that a big population of the country would sleep at night on empty stomach.
The government has been committing blunders galore in the various fields of life as a result of which the opposition political parties which had become a dead horse after their debacle in the last polls are now getting a new lease of life.