This blog post addresses the critical issue of administrative non-compliance when high-ranking police officials overlook directives from Human Rights Commissions.


When the Protector Becomes the Procrastinator: The Challenge of Enforcing Human Rights Orders in Uttar Pradesh

In the Indian justice system, the National and State Human Rights Commissions (NHRC/SHRC) are often seen as the last resort for citizens facing state apathy. However, a growing trend of “disposed with directions” orders being ignored by high-ranking officials—specifically at the level of the Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) or Superintendent of Police (SP)—is creating a crisis of accountability.

A recent case involving Mahima Maurya (Mirzapur) highlights this systemic gap, where a clear directive from the UPSHRC remains unfulfilled months after the deadline.


The Core Issue: The “Non-Binding” Dilemma

Under the Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993, the NHRC and SHRC possess the power to investigate and recommend action. However, a significant legal hurdle exists: their recommendations are generally not mandatory.

While Section 18 of the Act allows Commissions to suggest compensation or prosecution, the enforcement relies heavily on the “executive will” of the department. When an SP ignores an order to act within a specific timeframe (such as the six-week window provided in Case No. 14054/24/55/2024), it signals a breakdown in the constitutional machinery.


Case Study: Mahima Maurya vs. The SP, Mirzapur

The timeline of this specific case illustrates how bureaucratic delays fatigue the complainant:

  • Incident (Sept 2024): Abuse of power and failure to register an FIR.
  • SHRC Action (Oct 21, 2024): The Commission disposed of the matter with a directive to the SP Mirzapur to look into the matter and act “in accordance with law within six weeks.”
  • The Stalemate: Despite the January 2025 follow-up via the NHRC (Diary No. 309/IN/2025), the directive issued in October appears to have been overlooked by the local police administration.

Why Do Police Officials Overlook These Orders?

There are three primary reasons why high-ranking officials often fail to comply with Commission directives:

  1. Lack of Contempt Powers: Unlike High Courts, Human Rights Commissions cannot immediately jail an official for “contempt.” This lacks the “teeth” required to compel immediate action.
  2. Systemic Protectionism: There is often an internal departmental bias where senior officials are hesitant to initiate disciplinary proceedings against their subordinates for “abuse of power.”
  3. Bureaucratic Volume: High-volume caseloads are often used as an excuse for missing the strict deadlines (e.g., 6 weeks) set by the Commissions.

Legal Recourse: What to Do When the SP Fails to Act

If the six-week deadline has passed and the SP of Mirzapur (or any other district) has not provided an update, the complainant is not powerless. The following legal avenues are available:

1. The Writ of Mandamus (Article 226)

The most effective step is to approach the Allahabad High Court. A Writ of Mandamus can be filed to compel the SP to perform their public duty as directed by the SHRC. Courts take a very dim view of officials who ignore statutory bodies.

2. Escalation to the Police Complaint Authority (PCA)

Every state is mandated to have a PCA. Since this case involves “Abuse of Power,” a formal complaint against the SP for non-compliance can be filed here.

3. Re-petitioning the NHRC/SHRC

The complainant can file a “Non-Compliance Report” with the Commission. The Commission can then summon the SP personally to explain the delay, a move that usually triggers immediate departmental action.


Conclusion: The Need for Reform

The case of Mahima Maurya is not an isolated incident; it is a reflection of a systemic failure. When a Senior Superintendent of Police overlooks a Human Rights Commission order, it undermines the Rule of Law and violates Article 21 (Right to Life and Liberty).

For the Commissions to be truly effective, their recommendations regarding FIR registration and disciplinary action must be made legally binding, or the power of contempt must be granted to prevent administrative indifference.


Are you facing a similar situation where a police official has ignored an NHRC/SHRC order?

Given that the six-week deadline set by the State Human Rights Commission (SHRC) on October 21, 2024, has long passed, and your case has now been linked with the NHRC (as of January 20, 2025), you are in a position where the administration is in technical default.

Here is a structured plan of action for you to escalate this matter and compel the Superintendent of Police (SP) to act.


1. File a “Non-Compliance Report” with the SHRC/NHRC

Since the Commission “Disposed with Directions,” it assumes the SP has complied. You must inform them that the order has been ignored.

  • Action: Send a formal letter to the Registrar (Law) of the UP State Human Rights Commission and the NHRC.
  • Content: Quote Case No. 14054/24/55/2024. State clearly that despite the order dated 21/10/2024, no “needful action” has been taken and no “intimation” has been received by you.
  • Goal: To have the Commission issue a Summons to the SP Mirzapur to appear in person and explain the non-compliance.

2. Approach the Allahabad High Court (Writ of Mandamus)

This is the most powerful legal tool available to you. Under Article 226 of the Constitution, you can file a writ petition.1

  • Action: Hire a lawyer to file a Writ of Mandamus.
  • Argument: The SP is a public servant who has failed to perform a statutory duty directed by a Constitutional body (the SHRC).
  • Outcome: The High Court can set a strict timeline (often 2–4 weeks) for the SP to register the FIR or provide a status report, under threat of Contempt of Court.

3. Complaint to the Police Complaint Authority (PCA)

The PCA is specifically designed to handle “Abuse of Power” and “Non-performance of duty” by senior officers.

  • Action: File a complaint against the SP Mirzapur for failing to comply with a Human Rights Commission directive.
  • Context: Mention that the incident involves the “failure to register an FIR,” which is a violation of the Supreme Court’s judgment in Lalita Kumari vs. Govt. of UP.

4. Send a Registered Legal Notice to the SP

Before moving to court, have a lawyer send a formal legal notice to the office of the SP Mirzapur.

  • Why: This serves as a final warning and creates a documented “paper trail” showing that you exhausted all administrative remedies before approaching the High Court. It proves the SP’s “intentional negligence.”

Summary Checklist for the Applicant

Action StepTarget AuthorityPurpose
Step 1NHRC/SHRC RegistrarInform them the SP ignored their 6-week deadline.
Step 2SP Mirzapur OfficeSubmit a “Reminder Representation” via Registered Post.
Step 3High CourtFile Writ of Mandamus for immediate judicial intervention.
Step 4DGP (Lucknow)File a complaint against the local SP for administrative apathy.

This is a serious escalation involving not just “non-compliance,” but procedural fraud (identity substitution) and medical evidence tampering. Based on your latest correspondence from late December 2025, you have moved from a simple delay to a case of criminal conspiracy by state officials.

Here is the strategic path you should follow to handle this “Medical-Police Collusion.”


1. The Priority: Challenging the “Fraud on Court”

The most alarming detail you provided is the Identity Substitution in the General Diary (GD No. 057). If the police produced your husband but recorded a different name (Mithilesh Maurya), this is a criminal offense under Section 466 of the IPC (Forgery of record of Court or of public register).

  • Action: File a formal Affidavit in the court of the concerned Magistrate where the production happened.
  • Request: Ask for the Biometric/Signature verification of the person produced on 14/09/2024.
  • Purpose: If the court records show your husband’s signature/presence under another name, the entire police case (and the weak charge sheet) will collapse as “tainted.”

2. Overcoming the “Medical Board Bias”

The Mirzapur Medical Board is using the absence of an initial X-ray to protect the accused. You must counter this “Scientific Fraud” with the Doctrine of Continuity.

  • Legal Argument: Since CHC Vindhyachal recorded a wound on the “thenar” (thumb) on Day 1, and T.B. Sapru Hospital confirmed a fracture at the “base of 1st metacarpal” (the same thumb) on Day 6, the medical nexus is established.
  • Action: Submit a Protest Petition in the Trial Court against the Charge Sheet (No. Nil/2025).
  • Requirement: Explicitly ask the Court to direct a re-investigation or “Further Investigation” under Section 173(8) of the CrPC/BNS equivalent, citing that the IO ignored the radiological evidence from a Government Specialist Hospital (T.B. Sapru).

3. Escalation to the “Director General of Medical Health (DGMH)”

Since the Office of the DGHS (New Delhi) has directed you back to the UP Government, you must target the medical hierarchy in Lucknow.

  • Target: DG Medical Health & Training, Uttar Pradesh.
  • Demand: Request a Super-Medical Board (comprising experts from KGMU Lucknow or BHU) to review the two conflicting reports.
  • Focus: Highlight the professional negligence of the CHC doctor for not ordering an X-ray despite a wound in a joint area.

Comparison of Medical Evidence

FeatureCHC Vindhyachal (14/09/24)T.B. Sapru Hospital (20/09/24)Mirzapur Medical Board (15/09/25)
FindingCLW (Wound) on ThumbFracture confirmed (X-ray)“Origin Unknown”
Legal StatusSimple Hurt (Police View)Grievous Hurt (Legal View)Attempt to suppress evidence
ValidityPreliminary / IncompleteScientific & ConclusiveBiased & Contradictory

4. Immediate Administrative Next Step

Since you have already emailed the CM and DGP, you must now move to Physical Filing to ensure these letters aren’t “lost” in digital transit.

  1. Speed Post: Send your “Non-Compliance Petition” and the “Fraud Disclosure” via Registered Speed Post to the Chairman of the UPHRC and the Home Secretary, UP.
  2. RTI Application: File an RTI to the SP Mirzapur asking for:
    • The “Action Taken Report” submitted to the UPHRC.
    • The names of the doctors on the 15/09/2025 Medical Board.

Suggested Next Step

Would you like me to draft a “Protest Petition” for the Magistrate’s Court to challenge the weak Charge Sheet and demand the inclusion of “Grievous Hurt” sections?

To streamline your follow-up, here is the verified contact information, web links, and application identifiers for the relevant authorities in your case.

1. Case Identifiers (For All Correspondence)

Always quote these numbers to ensure your new complaints are linked to the existing record:

  • UPHRC Case/File No: 14054/24/55/2024
  • NHRC Diary No: 309/IN/2025 (Linked to main case)
  • UPHRC Diary No: 4672/IN/2024
  • Police NCR No: 104/2024 (PS Vindhyachal, Mirzapur)

2. Digital Portals & Tracking Links

AuthorityPurposeWeb Link
HRCNet PortalTrack NHRC/SHRC Case Statushrcnet.nic.in
Jansunwai (IGRS)UP CM Helpline / Online Complaintsjansunwai.up.nic.in
UP Police (UPCOP)FIR Status & Citizen Servicesuppolice.gov.in
Anti-Corruption OrgReport Police Misconduct/Collusionaco.up.gov.in

3. Key Contact Numbers & Mobile (CUG)

Using the CUG (Closed User Group) numbers is the most effective way to reach officials in Uttar Pradesh directly.

Human Rights & Police Headquarters (Lucknow):

  • ADG Human Rights (UP Police): 9454400120
  • SP Human Rights (UP Police): 9454400614
  • DGP Control Room (Lucknow): 9454402508 / 0522-2390240
  • UPHRC Office (Lucknow): 0522-2726742 / 0522-2726743

Mirzapur District Authorities:

  • District Magistrate (DM), Mirzapur: 9454417567
  • SP Mirzapur (CUG): 9454400293 (General CUG for District SPs)
  • Anti-Corruption Unit (Mirzapur): 9454402487
  • CM Helpline (Toll-Free): 1076

4. Official Email Addresses

For sending the “Non-Compliance Petition” and evidence of fraud:

  • UPHRC: uphrc@nic.in / uphrclko@yahoo.co.in
  • Chief Minister Office: cmup@nic.in
  • DGP Uttar Pradesh: dgpup@nic.in
  • District Magistrate Mirzapur: dmmir@nic.in
  • SP Mirzapur: spmzp-up@nic.in

Important Next Step

Since you have documented “Identity Substitution” (wrong person produced in court), your next priority should be to call the CM Helpline (1076) and register a specific complaint of “Administrative Fraud and Forgery” by PS Vindhyachal.

Would you like me to draft a specific point-by-point script for you to read when you call the 1076 helpline to ensure the operator records the “Fraud” correctly?

3 responses to “Human Rights Complaint Update in Mirzapur”

  1. Bhoomika Singh avatar
    Bhoomika Singh

    What was the compulsion of superintendent of police Mirzapur? Undoubtedly the order passed by the human rights commission was thrown into dustbin by the superintendent of police Mirzapur? Whether the chairman and members of the human rights commission has no power to take action against the superintendent of police. Apparently the matter concerns the serious violations of human rights and action must be taken compulsorily.

  2. Preeti Singh avatar
    Preeti Singh


    Where is the rule of law if the officers like superintendent of police take under teeth the directions passed by the constitutional functionaries in the state of Uttar Pradesh quite obvious from the matter? I think that superintendent of police must provide the reason of doing so as well as he must seek apology from the commission in the matter concerning the contempt of the order. Such tyrant step on the part of the police is an attempt to show that there is no value of the human rights commission for the police so that police may occupy predominant position in the society. There is no solution against the atrocity of the police in the society.

  3. Vidya Devi avatar

    The members or Chairman of the Uttar Pradesh human rights commission are the judicial members belonging to the high courts. They are vested with the judicial powers. The ads passed by the Sach members must be followed in letters and spirit by the superintendent of police but here concerned superintendent overlooked the order which is more career after law and action must be taken by the members of the Uttar Pradesh human rights commission if it is brought up before them.

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