India Crime Rate Declines Significantly
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General Studies Paper II: Issues Relating to Development, Crime, Gender Equality, Issues Related to Women |
Why in News?
According to the latest National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) Report, India reported a 6% decline in overall cognisable crime cases in 2024, with crime rate falling from 448.3 to 418.9 per lakh population.

Key Findings and Trends in NCRB Crime Report
- Overall Crime Statistics: India recorded 58.85 lakh cognizable crimes in 2024 compared to 62.41 lakh cases in 2023.
- This 6% dip from the previous year led to a reduction in the national crime rate per lakh population from 448.3 to 418.9.
- Cases registered included: 35.44 lakh under the IPC/Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) and 23.41 lakh under Special and Local Laws (SLL).
- Crimes Against Women: Registered offences fell by 1.5%, totaling 4.41 lakh cases.
- “Cruelty by Husband or Relatives” remained the most frequent charge, though the crime rate per lakh women dropped to 64.6.
- Explosive Cybercrime Growth: Cybercrime surged by 17% with 1,01,928 cases reported. Financial fraud accounted for a massive 72.6% of these, underscoring the shift toward digital-centric criminal activities.
- Telangana recorded the highest number of cybercrime cases in the country with 27,230 cases, marking a nearly 50% increase.
- Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh, and Maharashtra accounted for the other majority of cases.
- Nearly 35,000 cybercrime cases were registered in metro cities in 2024.
- Violent Crime Trends: Murder cases saw a marginal 2.4% decrease, with 27,049 incidents recorded nationwide. Delhi, however, continues to face challenges, topping metro cities in violent crime volume.
- Crimes Against Children: The NCRB reported nearly a 6% rise in crimes against children during 2024.
- Kidnapping, sexual offences under the POCSO Act, trafficking, and online exploitation emerged as major threats.
- Despite overall dips, offences against children remain high, with Delhi reporting 7,662 cases, significantly outpacing other major hubs like Mumbai and Bengaluru.
- Missing children cases increased by 7.8% from 91,296 to 98,375 (Girls: 75,603; Boys: 22,768; Transgender children: 4).
- Crimes Against Senior Citizens: Crimes against senior citizens rose sharply by 16.9%, increasing from 27,886 cases in 2023 to 32,602 cases in 2024.
- Financial fraud, neglect, cheating, and property-related disputes dominated this category.
- Economic Offences: Forgery, cheating, and fraud led to a 4.6% increase in economic crimes, reaching 2.14 lakh cases. These crimes now represent a major portion of urban criminal litigation.
- Offences Against the State: Cases under this category rose by 6.6%, with 5,194 registrations.
- The majority (84.6%) involved the Prevention of Damage to Public Property Act, alongside 649 UAPA cases.
- Marginalized Communities: Crimes against Scheduled Castes fell by 3.6%, while cases involving Scheduled Tribes dropped by a substantial 23.1%, reaching 9,966 cases annually.
- Suicide and Drug Overdose: India reported 1,70,746 suicides, with daily wage earners comprising 31% of victims.
- Drug overdose deaths jumped by 50%, with Tamil Nadu recording the highest fatalities.
- Safety Rankings: Mangalore emerged as one of the safest cities, while Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan maintained high absolute case volumes due to their large populations and improved registration.
- Judicial Bottlenecks: While police maintain an 84% charge-sheeting rate, court pendency remains critical at 92%, with thousands of cases awaiting trial annually.
Major Factors Behind India’s Falling Crime Rate
- Legislative Reforms (BNS 2023): The replacement of the IPC with the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) on July 1, 2024, significantly impacted statistics.
- A 30.58% drop in “Hurt” cases occurred because simple hurt was reclassified as a non-cognisable offence, meaning police no longer register it automatically as a criminal case without a court warrant.
- The government expanded the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C), National Cybercrime Reporting Portal, and cyber forensic laboratories.
- AI and Digital Surveillance: The Safe City Project and the launch of MahaCrime OS AI in early 2026 introduced 10,000 AI-equipped cameras with facial recognition and distress detection (identifying screams).
- Under the Modernisation of Police Forces Scheme, states upgraded forensic labs, surveillance systems, mobility infrastructure, and emergency response mechanisms.
- This proactive monitoring has acted as a strong deterrent against street crimes and expedited suspect identification.
- Internal Security Stability: Strategic crackdowns on Left-wing extremism and Naxalism have led to a near-total eradication of violence in formerly affected regions.
- By March 2026, the Home Ministry reported that over 10,000 youth in the Northeast laid down arms, contributing to a marked dip in offences against the state.
- Enhanced Law Enforcement Efficiency: States like Kerala and West Bengal achieved high chargesheeting rates of over 90%.
- This rapid movement from arrest to formal charging increases the perceived certainty of punishment, discouraging repeat offenders and organized crime syndicates.
- The government strengthened fast-track courts, forensic evidence usage, and digital hearings to reduce delays in criminal trials.
- Targeted Social Safety Schemes: Initiatives like Mission Shakti and the Nirbhaya Fund have improved ground-level safety infrastructure for women.
- Fast-track courts and One Stop Centres improved support for victims of domestic violence and sexual crimes.
- These efforts contributed to a 1.5% marginal decline in crimes against women, reducing the rate to 64.6 per lakh population.
- Modernized Police Networks: The CCTNS (Crime and Criminal Tracking Network & Systems) now integrates 17,712 police stations, allowing for real-time information sharing across borders.
- The NCRB integrated databases like NAFIS, Digital Police Portal, and Cri-MAC to improve intelligence sharing and criminal profiling.
- This integration has slashed kidnapping and abduction cases by 15.4% as interstate criminal movement is now more easily tracked.
Challenges Highlighted by NCRB Report
- Institutional Weaknesses: The NCRB data highlights serious institutional challenges including massive pendency of investigations, especially in cybercrime and financial fraud cases.
- Low conviction rates, shortage of trained investigators, limited forensic capacity, and delays in evidence collection continue to weaken effective law enforcement and reduce deterrence against organised and digital crimes.
- Rising Digital Policing Gaps: India’s rapid digitalisation has exposed major weaknesses in cyber policing infrastructure.
- Police forces in several states still face shortages of cyber experts, advanced forensic laboratories, and digital intelligence tools.
- Weak cyber awareness among citizens further increases vulnerability to phishing, financial scams, identity theft, and online exploitation.
- Persistent Gender and Social Vulnerabilities: The NCRB findings underline continuing social vulnerabilities, particularly crimes against women, children, and senior citizens.
- Domestic violence, trafficking, sexual offences, and online harassment remain widespread despite legal reforms.
- Gender inequality, poor social awareness, and weak victim support systems continue to obstruct effective protection mechanisms.
- Juvenile Crime and Mental Health Crisis: The report also reflects growing concerns over juvenile involvement in crimes, rising substance abuse, and mental health stress.
- Unemployment, social isolation, digital addiction, and lack of counselling infrastructure contribute to increasing behavioural vulnerabilities among youth populations across urban and semi-urban regions.
- Governance Challenge: NCRB data points to major governance gaps including weak coordination between states, delayed intelligence sharing, and fragmented criminal databases.
- Insufficient rehabilitation systems, overcrowded prisons, shortage of counsellors, and uneven implementation of policing reforms continue to affect India’s long-term internal security management.
Way Forward
- National Integrated Cyber Shield: A future-ready National Cyber Shield Grid linking banks, telecom networks, fintech platforms, and law-enforcement agencies should be developed to counter cyber fraud and digital crimes.
- India can adopt Estonia’s cyber-resilience model by creating decentralised encrypted citizen-security databases and rapid cyber response units in every district.
- Social Prevention Framework: India needs a long-term Crime Prevention through Social Development Strategy focusing on mental health, youth counselling, anti-drug rehabilitation, and digital literacy.
- Community psychologists, school-based behavioural monitoring, and neighbourhood counselling centres can reduce juvenile crime, addiction, and social violence at early stages.
- Smart Judicial Ecosystem: The country should create fully digital smart courts using AI-assisted case management, blockchain-based evidence storage, and virtual witness systems.
- Adopting global best practices from the UK and South Korea can reduce pendency, improve transparency, and accelerate conviction processes in complex criminal investigations.
- Cooperative Security Governance: India should establish a National Internal Security Coordination Authority integrating state police, intelligence agencies, cybersecurity experts, and forensic institutions on a single real-time platform.
- Greater international cooperation with Interpol and global cyber agencies can strengthen India’s response against organised crime, trafficking, terrorism, and transnational digital fraud networks.
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Also Read: Crime in India Report 2023 by NCRB |