Hyderabad, May 6:2026
In a chilling exposé of street-level misogyny, a senior IPS officer herself became the target of harassment during a covert midnight operation in Hyderabad — triggering a major police crackdown.
Malkajgiri Commissioner IPS officer Sumathi went undercover as an ordinary woman on the streets of Dilsukhnagar late Tuesday night. What followed was disturbing: groups of men surrounded her and brazenly asked, “Will you come? What’s your rate?” — assuming she was soliciting.
The operation, which ran from 12:00 AM to 3:30 AM, led to the detention of 40 men. Shockingly, many among them were students and working professionals, exposing how deeply normalized such behavior has become. Police sources said several of the accused were under the influence of ganja.
All those detained were taken in for counseling and strict warning, but the episode has raised serious questions about deterrence and enforcement.
There’s a darker layer to this story. Officials acknowledged that some women, driven by severe financial distress, are forced onto the streets at night to support their families. These harsh realities blur perceptions — but they do not excuse predatory behavior. Experts argue that economic support and rehabilitation for vulnerable women could help prevent such situations.
If a IPS officer isn’t spared on Hyderabad’s streets, what chance does an ordinary woman have at midnight? The incident has ignited outrage, with growing calls for tougher policing, zero tolerance enforcement, and urgent social intervention to make the city safer for women.
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