Crime in Pimpri Market has left traders worried. Read the full report on PuneriPages.in.
By Prashant for PuneriPages.in
Rajesh Gupta has seen Pimpri grow. For over 20 years, heโs run his small electronics shop in the heart of the market. But last month, something changed. In the middle of the day, thieves walked away with lakhs worth of new mobile stock. “This never used to happen,” he told me, eyes weary. “Now, every morning I wonder whatโs gone missing.”
And heโs not alone. Merchants across Pimpri are scared. Petty thefts, break-ins, and even extortion calls have become alarmingly common. Tired of waiting for change, a group of these traders took matters into their own hands. On Monday, they went straight to Maharashtraโs Deputy Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis with a simple plea: make us feel safe again.
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When Local Complaints Fall on Deaf Ears
The traders didnโt just complainโthey came prepared. Backed by the Pimpri Chinchwad Tradersโ Association, they handed over a memorandum listing exactly what needs to change. From the looks of it, this wasnโt just about crime statistics. It was about daily fear, shrinking footfall, and the slow death of business.
โWeโre not asking for special treatment,โ said Nilesh Jagtap, the associationโs president. โWeโre asking to be able to do our jobs without worrying about whoโs lurking outside our shop.โ
What the Traders Want: Their 3-Point Safety Plan
Hereโs what the traders proposed:
- More Cops on the Ground โ Especially during the busy evening hours.
- Better Eyes in the Sky โ CCTV cameras throughout the market that police actually monitor.
- A Permanent Police Outpost โ Right inside the market. Visible, accessible, and accountable.
โThese are basic asks,โ Jagtap told me. โWeโre not asking for Z+ security. Just the basics.โ
Shops Are Closing Early, and Itโs Hitting Hard
Pimpriโs market isnโt just a shopping hubโitโs a lifeline for thousands of families. But lately, the buzz is fading. Fewer people stay past sunset. Women, especially, prefer to avoid the area in the evening.
Meera Patil, who runs a garment store, summed it up best. โI used to keep my shop open till 10 PM. Now? I close by 7. Canโt take the risk.โ
Private security has become the norm. But not every shopkeeper can afford that. Losses from theft and break-ins have quietly become a hidden cost of doing business.
Police Speak Up: We Hear You, But Weโre Stretched Thin
I reached out to Senior Inspector Suresh Phadke at the Pimpri Police Station. He didnโt deny the problems. โWeโre doing our best,โ he said. โBut our manpower is stretched. Reinforcements are coming, but until then, weโre trying to manage with what we have.โ
He welcomed the tradersโ proposal, especially the idea of CCTV monitoring. โIt helps everyone,โ he said. โMore eyes, quicker response.โ
Still, itโs clear: the police are under pressure, and the traders are out of patience.
This Is More Than Just CrimeโItโs a Test
Whatโs happening in Pimpri isnโt just about shoplifting or phone thefts. Itโs about trustโbetween citizens and the system. If business owners start giving up on law enforcement, the damage spreads beyond the market.
The Deputy CM has promised to act. The traders are hopeful, but cautious. โWeโve heard promises before,โ said Rajesh quietly. โThis time, weโll wait and watch.โ
Pimpriโs marketplace has always been a symbol of hustle and ambition. It deserves to be a symbol of safety too.
Letโs hope someoneโs listening.
This article is published on Puneripages.in as part of our commitment to bring real, local stories to the forefront.
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