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The video, "UTTAR PRADESH POLICE REGAULTIONS For UP APO EXAM 2025," provides a detailed overview of the Uttar Pradesh Police Regulations, essential for the UP APO Examination (0:06). Structure of the Regulations: The regulations consist of 37 Chapters, 4 Parts, and 554 Paragraphs (0:25). There are also 5 Appendices (0:37). Parts of the Regulations: Part 1: Power and Duties of Officers (1:45) - Chapters 1 to 9 (2:21). Part 2: Particular Duties (1:52) - Chapters 10 to 28 (2:27). This part is highlighted as the most important for examination questions (2:30). Part 3: Internal Administration (1:59) - Chapters 29 to 34 (2:43). Part 4: Training (2:06) - Chapters 35 to 37 (2:49). Key Chapters and Officer Duties Discussed: Chapter 1: Superior Officers (3:07) - Deals with the powers and duties of high-ranking officers, including the Director General of Police (DGP), Inspector General (IG), Deputy Inspector General (DIG), and District Magistrate (DM). DGP (DG cum IG): Head of the department, advisor to the Governor, responsible for staff allocation, fund distribution, and overall non-gazetted staff responsibility (11:19-12:06). IG: Supervisory officer for the range, handles transfers of non-gazetted officers, appeals, revisions, and petitions, and grants casual leave to gazetted officers (12:13-12:58). DIG: Responsible for work within the range, inspects district superintendents annually, and prepares inspection reports (13:01-13:32). They also supervise training at police stations and colleges (15:18). Commissioner (including Collector and Deputy Commissioner): Exercises supervisory magisterial powers over police matters (16:13-16:34). DM (District Magistrate): Head of Criminal Administration. Jointly reviews complaints and actions with the SP monthly (16:38-18:38). Inspects police stations once during the financial year (18:40-18:45). Sanctions removal of names from the crime register (18:52-19:25). SP (Superintendent of Police): Head of the police force in the district (20:16). All communication between the magistrate and police goes through the SP (20:28). Assistant and Deputy Superintendent of Police: Perform duties as directed by the SP (23:17-23:33). Chapter 2: Reserve Inspector (RI) and Reserve Sub-Inspector (RSI) (23:54) RI: Officer in charge of the Reserve Line, inspects guards and escorts, and manages daily police parades (24:01-24:24). Responsible for the safe custody of arms, ammunition, and stores (24:29-24:44). Also handles recruitment training (24:49-24:57). RSI: Assists the RI, manages the Reserve, commands escorts and guards, regulates traffic, and maintains order (25:05-25:34). Chapter 4: Circle Inspector (CI) (26:12) Principal Duty: Supervises investigations, prevents crime, coordinates preventive and detective work, and inspects police stations once a year (26:24-27:05). Chapter 5: Sub-Inspector (SI) and Under Officer of Civil Police (28:50) Officer In-Charge: Responsible for the work within a police station, including subordinate performance, correctness of registers (General Diary, Case Diary), and safe custody of government money and property (29:10-30:12). Second Officer: Assembles morning parades, reports defects to the officer in charge, investigates cases, and drills police (32:06-32:39). Head Constable: Primarily handles office and clerical work, record-keeping, accounting, writing General Diaries and First Information Reports, and maintaining cash books (32:55-33:20). Can also conduct inquests if empowered by the SP (33:32-33:38). Constable: Main duty is crime prevention and always being in uniform (34:09-34:25). Chapter 6: Armed Police (36:28) Work: Protects treasuries, police stations, tahsils, lock-ups, finds hidden treasures, prisoners, and government property (36:36-36:58). Use of Force: Details the legal authority and principles governing the use of force, including firearms, against crowds (38:04-38:48). Chapter 7: Armed Training Reserve (ATR) (39:37) Maintained in every district, with a service period not exceeding two months (39:53-40:10). Training includes drill, musketry, observation, and general duties (40:28-41:04). Chapter 8: Mounted Police (41:07) Duties: Patrols roads, escorts dignitaries, communicates information, apprehends criminals, suppresses dacoity, and controls traffic (41:14-41:33). Board of Revenue and Commissioners have two mounted police for their tours (41:36-41:53). Training involves horsemanship for two months (42:33-42:41). Chapter 9: Village Police (42:53) Village Chowkidar: Appointed and removed by the DM (42:58). Their chief duty is to watch and ward the village under their charge (43:25-43:40). They report to the Village Headman and assist in tracing offenders (43:47-43:52).