Centre Ramps Up Crackdown On Cyber Fraud; States Roll Out New Schemes And Key Decisions
The central government has stepped up its multi‑agency offensive against organised cyber fraud while state governments in Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar have simultaneously announced key policy decisions, welfare measures and administrative changes that are dominating today’s political and governance discourse.
Nationwide Crackdown On Organised Cyber Fraud
The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has intensified its action against large cyber‑crime syndicates by filing a chargesheet against a group of accused involved in so‑called “digital arrest” scams that targeted victims across India and abroad. Under these scams, callers allegedly posed as law‑enforcement or government officials, coerced victims into staying on video calls for hours and extorted large sums of money under the pretext of resolving fabricated criminal cases.
In a parallel effort, Delhi Police has launched “Operation Cyberhawk 2.0”, a coordinated nationwide crackdown on online financial fraud that was conducted over two days across multiple states with support from the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre under the Ministry of Home Affairs. According to officials, legal action has been taken against more than 2,800 individuals, thousands of suspects were questioned and investigators linked hundreds of fresh and old First Information Reports to the same fraud networks, helping trace nearly ₹944 crore in suspicious or defrauded funds.
Cyber‑crime experts point out that the enforcement wave comes against the backdrop of an alarming surge in online financial fraud, with government data showing losses in the tens of thousands of crores and a sharp rise in cases within just one year.
Centre’s Policy Push And Anti‑Fraud Infrastructure
At the policy level, the Union government has been expanding its dedicated cyber‑crime infrastructure through platforms like the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) and a centralised Cyber Fraud Mitigation Centre that brings together major banks, financial institutions and telecom operators to flag suspicious accounts and transactions in real time. Officials say this framework is designed to support state police forces with data, analytics and network‑level intelligence so that large cyber‑fraud cartels can be disrupted more quickly.
Tools such as a national “suspect registry” and advanced mapping modules are being used to identify mule accounts, analyse links between perpetrators and track cross‑border call‑centre operations that run phishing, loan, investment and impersonation scams from abroad. Authorities claim that this data‑driven approach has already prevented several thousand crore rupees in potential losses and led to thousands of arrests in connected cases.
Key State‑Level Announcements In Delhi And UP
In the National Capital Region, cyber‑crime enforcement is moving in parallel with strict environmental and civic measures, including the enforcement of the highest tier of anti‑pollution curbs and increased monitoring of digital payment frauds reported through local police and national helplines. Senior officers in Delhi and adjoining districts have held awareness meetings with resident groups and business associations, urging citizens to report suspicious calls immediately and to use only verified digital payment channels.
In Uttar Pradesh, agencies have been coordinating with central bodies under broader campaigns like Operation Chakra and similar initiatives to identify hubs where cyber‑fraud syndicates operate call centres or use local residents as account holders for laundering money. Investigations triggered by inputs from foreign agencies have led to raids on suspected facilities in and around Noida and other urban centres, with multiple arrests and seizures of digital evidence.
Bihar Focuses On Jobs, New Departments And Governance
Bihar has emerged as a major talking point in domestic politics after the state cabinet, chaired by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, approved the creation of three new departments – Youth, Employment and Skill Development, Higher Education and Civil Aviation – aimed at boosting job opportunities and improving sector‑specific governance. The government has linked these structural changes to its target of creating one crore jobs and employment opportunities between 2025 and 2030, building on earlier commitments under initiatives such as Saat Nischay‑2.
Alongside these changes, the cabinet has cleared an increase in dearness allowance for state government employees and pensioners under both the Fifth and Sixth Pay Commission structures, providing some relief against inflation. The state has also notified Bihar e‑Evidence Management Rules, 2025, to promote digital handling of case records and interoperability across police, courts and other criminal‑justice institutions under the Interoperable Criminal Justice System framework.
The administrative realignment includes declaring Gaya and Munger as civil defence districts, reorganising the Directorate of Mines and Geology into separate entities for mining and exploration, and renaming the Directorate of Technical Development as the Directorate of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises to better support smaller businesses. In parallel, there has been a fresh round of transfers and reshuffling of senior IAS officers, which the state government says will streamline decision‑making in key departments.
Political Significance And Public Response
The twin focus on cyber‑crime and employment‑linked governance is expected to remain at the centre of political messaging, with ruling parties highlighting crackdowns and new schemes as evidence of delivery, while opposition leaders raise questions about implementation, rural distress and the overall safety of digital transactions. Civil‑society groups and digital‑rights advocates have welcomed stronger action against fraud networks but continue to stress the need for public awareness campaigns, transparent reporting of outcomes and safeguards against misuse of surveillance powers.
For citizens, the latest developments translate into both increased enforcement against online scams and the promise of new opportunities through job‑oriented departments, skilling programmes and infrastructure projects at the state level. Experts suggest that sustained collaboration between central agencies, state governments and financial institutions will be crucial if India is to curb its fast‑growing cyber‑fraud ecosystem while also meeting ambitious employment and welfare targets.

