On the concluding day of a three-day training programme organised by Delhi Police's Special Police Unit for Women and Children (SPUWAC) in collaboration with Data Security Council of India (DSCI) and International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children (ICMEC), police officers were told that they might be given access to software used by the FBI and other premier investigative agencies.
"During the three-day training programme, we were told that ICMEC has developed software in collaboration with the FBI, other law enforcement agencies in the US and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) that might be made available to us.
Officers were also taught about working on various file sharing websites and different kinds of torrent files.
The closing ceremony was attended by Nutan Guha Biswas, Additional Secretary Ministry of Women and Child Development, along with Sundari Nanda, Special Commissioner of Police, Women Safety, Airport and Modernisation.
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"Many of the crimes against women and children are happening in the online space. We have to up our game when we are dealing with such criminals. It is essential for our officers to know about online platforms and social media and the threats posed by them.
"For instance, if a girl visits a police station saying that she is being stalked on Facebook and the officer there doesn't know about the social media platform, what will the girl do? It was DSCI that approached us with the idea and we were quite happy to partner with them," said Nanda.
"The sessions have been quite informative but many of the technologies that the speakers explained about, we don't have access to such kind of technologies. Many of the speakers were using quite technical terms which many of us couldn't grasp fully," said one of the attendees.