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UP govt to use NSA, Goondas Act to curb power theft

Lucknow: The Uttar Pradesh government has decided to slap the stringent National Security Act (NSA) and Goondas Act against those obstructing electricity officials from discharging their duties while checking power theft.
State Energy Minister Shrikant Sharma said honest customers suffer because of power theft and the government is committed to check the menace.
"National Security Act and Goondas Act will be slapped on those obstructing officials from discharging their duties while curbing electricity theft. Power theft is a national crime. We are in the process of setting up 75 'bijli thane' (power police stations) for this," he said here.
Under the NSA, a person can be detained without bail or trial and the authorities need not disclose the grounds of detention if they believe the detainee can act in a way that poses a threat to the security of the state/country or the maintenance of public order.
The Goondas Act aims at a year-long preventive detention of habitual offenders. According to the law, a 'goonda' is a person who, either by himself or as a member or leader of a gang, habitually commits or attempts to commit or abets the commission of offences.
Sharma said the state government would follow the 'Gujarat Model' of power distribution and keep a check on pilferage and establish dedicated police stations in all 75 districts where cases of power theft would be taken up.
The tough 'Gujarat Model' envisages constitution of dedicated vigilance squads and setting up special police stations to check pilferage.
The Uttar Pradesh government has already initiated "name and shame" policy for power bill defaulters under which names of big defaulters are disclosed in a bid to cajole them to pay their bills at the earliest.
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