A Stage for Cyber Safety
This year, the Delhi Police’s cyber unit in the outer-north district turned the city’s Ramlila gatherings into classrooms on fraud prevention. Before and after performances, warnings against sharing OTPs or clicking suspicious links flash across giant screens. Officers hand out pamphlets and field questions from spectators.
Deputy Commissioner Hareeshwar V. Swami said the aim is simple: use high-footfall cultural events to reach citizens who may never see a police bulletin or social-media campaign.
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Reaching the Vulnerable
The experiment targets those most at risk—elderly residents, small vendors, and festival-goers less likely to navigate digital warnings online. By embedding advice into ritual, police hope to turn spectators into informed users.
But questions remain about follow-through. Will festivalgoers remember the tips? Will they trust the helplines enough to call? Without quick redressal, awareness risks fading once the lights dim.
Policing by Performance
The Ramlila campaign highlights a police force adjusting to crimes that are invisible yet pervasive. By aligning law enforcement with tradition and spectacle, Delhi Police seek not just to warn but to build trust. Whether that trust endures beyond the festive grounds may define the real success of the experiment.
