The killing of civilians by the police under questionable circumstances—police encounters as they are generally called—happens in several countries. In the US, according to The Economist, police kill about 1,000 people a year. “No other rich country comes close.” The statistics of poorer countries are worse. In El Salvador, police are 22 times deadlier than the US. In Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), cops killed more people in 2017 than all of America’s police. In the Philippines, the police had a license to kill all those involved in drug peddling. In Balochistan (Pakistan), people are killed every day with tacit approval of the state government. In Nigeria, according to a human rights activist, “police brutality is as common as water”.