Mumbai (Maharashtra):A poignant video which went viral in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic summed up the year for the police force in Mumbai and Maharashtra.
It showed a child pleading with his policeman father, who is leaving house for duty, to stay at home because "there is corona out there".
As the police faced an unenviable task of keeping people off the streets during lockdown, the virus took a heavy toll on them - 312 police personnel died and around 28,500 were infected across the state.
The Mumbai police also found themselves caught in the crossfire in the political slugfest over actor Sushant Singh Rajputs suicide.
"This year will be remembered for the sacrifices made by police officials in the fight against COVID-19, which claimed 98 police officers and constables. Their sacrifice will never be forgotten," Mumbai police commissioner Param Bir Singh said.
"Working relentlessly during the pandemic was our the biggest task, but my force rose to the challenge," Singh said.
Before the outbreak of the pandemic, huge protests in the city against the Citizenship Amendment Act and National Register of Citizens kept police busy.
Hundreds of students and others thronged the Gateway of India on the night of January 6 after a brutal attack by goons on students of Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi.
There were also echoes of Shaheen Bagh agitation in Delhi as Morland Road in Mumbai turned into the venue of a 'Mumbai Bagh' protest. It ended 56 days later with the coronavirus outbreak.
An incident where 23-year-old poet Bappaditya Sarkar was taken to a police station in Mumbai by an Uber driver after overhearing his phone conversation about the anti-CAA protest in the first week of February raised questions about the polarised atmosphere and paranoia over the protests.
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After the lockdown was imposed in March, lakhs of migrant workers from other parts of the country were stranded in Mumbai and other cities in Maharashtra. The police were instrumental in providing them with food and taking care of their safety.
The pandemic, which saw a drop in the crime rate, also unleashed a flood of rumours on social media. Maharashtra Cyber, the cybercrime wing of the police, cracked down on these rumour-mongers.
Police in Palghar district came in for criticism when two Jain monks and their driver were lynched in April in the presence of local police personnel on the suspicion of being thieves and part of a gang of child-lifters.