"); NewWindow.document.close(); return false; } // end hiding from old browsers -->

IRIN Africa | West Africa | LIBERIA | LIBERIA: First batch of newly trained police recruits is deployed in Monrovia | Democracy-Human Rights-Peace Security | News Items
Wednesday 14 September 2005
 
Regions
Latest News
East Africa
Great Lakes
Horn of Africa
Southern Africa
West Africa
·Benin
·Burkina Faso
·Cameroon
·Cape Verde
·Chad
·Cote d'Ivoire
·Gabon
·Gambia
·Ghana
·Eq. Guinea
·Guinea
·Guinea Bissau
·Liberia
·Mali
·Mauritania
·Niger
·Nigeria
·Sao Tome & Pr.
·Senegal
·Sierra Leone
·Togo
·West Africa
·Western Sahara
Weeklies
Themes
Children
Democracy & Governance
Early warning
Economy
Education
Environment
Food Security
Gender Issues
Health & Nutrition
HIV/AIDS
Human Rights
Natural Disasters
Peace & Security
Refugees/IDPs
IRIN Films
Web Specials

LIBERIA: First batch of newly trained police recruits is deployed in Monrovia


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]



©  

MONROVIA, 28 Mar 2005 (IRIN) - A first contingent of more than 100 Liberian police trained by the United Nations was deployed on the streets of the capital Monrovia on Monday, a police spokesman said.

Colonel Ansumana Kromah, the deputy director of police operations, said the 123 recruits had completed their nine months of training on Saturday and had immediately been deployed to various locations within the capital.

Further contingents of newly trained recruits would be sent to the interior soon, he added.

Kromah told IRIN that 85 of the first batch of officers to join the new-look Liberian National Police were brand new recruits.

The remaining 38 were police officers who had served under the government of discredited former president Charles Taylor, who had been screened for human rights abuse and retrained, he added.

Kromah said the training programme at the police academy, which is presently run by UN police officers drawn from forces around the globe, included human rights education, riot control, traffic control, community policing, criminal investigation and civic responsibility.

The United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) aims to train and equip a new 3,500-strong police force by the end of 2006. Its immediate target is to deploy 1,800 officers throughout the country by the time presidential and parliamentary elections are held in October.

Since Liberia's 14-year civil war came to an end in 2003, security in the country has been maintained by a 15,000-strong UN peacekeeping force, which includes more than 1,000 civilian police.

This has been supplemented until now by a 500-strong interim Liberian police force, comprising former police officers who were rapidly retrained.

Police chief Colonel Joseph Kerkura said the United States had agreed to supply some equipment for Liberia's new police force, but he appealed to other international donors to provide more.

[ENDS]


 Theme(s) Democracy-Human Rights-Peace Security
Other recent LIBERIA reports:

Donors spell out harsh consequences if anti-graft plan not agreed,  8/Sep/05

Study sees risk of new war unless corruption stamped out,  7/Sep/05

Study finds many girls selling bodies to pay for school,  6/Sep/05

Poachers, miners, squatters leave Sapo National Park,  2/Sep/05

Funding crunch threatens return of 64,000 IDPs before polls,  31/Aug/05

Other recent Democracy-Human Rights-Peace Security reports:

MAURITANIA: First wave of one-time dissidents return home in sweeping amnesty, 13/Sep/05

WESTERN SAHARA: Polisario releases all remaining Moroccan prisoners of war, 18/Aug/05

NIGERIA: Government rejects charges of widespread torture by police, 28/Jul/05

NIGER: Soldiers jailed for kidnapping and torturing a colleague, 26/Jul/05

GUINEA-BISSAU: Government accuses close ally of Kumba Yala of organising attack on Interior Ministry, 19/Jul/05

[Back] [Home Page]

Click here to send any feedback, comments or questions you have about IRIN's Website or if you prefer you can send an Email to Webmaster

Copyright © IRIN 2005
The material contained on www.IRINnews.org comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the IRIN copyright page for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.