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Motorway Police collered camel Carvans with reflecting tape on RCD Highway N-25 to save camels and road users from accident.

Photo Credit Afzal Majeed

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Islamabad to Get 10 Hi-Tech Police Stations Similar to Hong Kong Police

Following the suggestions of the Federal Minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry, Islamabad Police, in collaboration with the government, is going to set up ten hi-tech police stations following the model of Hong Kong Police.

The minister announced this in a tweet on Sunday following his visit to Police Service Centres in the federal capital.

He visited the facility with IGP Islamabad Aamir Zulfiqar Khan and lauded the initiatives of ICT police for providing one-window operations to the citizens.

The minister also informed that the police are ready to make video cameras a part of the uniform, on the pattern of Hong Kong police.


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PM Imran Khan has formally inaugurated the Model Police Station at Mianwali.

Establishing model police stations in Punjab is part of Prime Minister Imran Khan's initiative and vision of justice for all.


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‏آئی جی اسلام آباد محمد عامر ذوالفقار خان خصوصی کاوشوں سے چیک پوسٹس پر جدید ٹیکنالوجی کے ذریعے فنگر پرنٹ کا استعمال شروع.

بائیو میٹرک کی مدد سے ہر شہری کا ریکارڈ ناکہ جات پر میسر ہوگا.جس شخص کی تصدیق کرنا مقصود ہوگی تھانے لے جانے کی ضرورت نہیں پڑے گی.



Islamabad Police started using fingerprint through modern technology on check posts.

With the help of bio-Matric, every citizen's record will be available on blockade. The person who wants to confirm will not need to be taken the police station.


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Pakistan’s High Commissioner in Malaysia Amna Baloch said Malaysia was negotiating with Pakistan to hire security guards after it had stopped hiring low-skilled workers from other countries.

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“The initial negotiations between both the countries have already been held at highest level while modalities to formalise the hiring process were being worked out,” she said
Previously, Amna said Malaysia was hiring security guards from Nepal under an agreement which now had been revised. “It is a best time for us to take advantage of this opportunity and send our low-skilled workforce to Malaysia.”
A senior officer from the Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Development confirmed the development and said Malaysia had a potential to recruit 100,000 to 150,000 Pakistani security guards.
 
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Motorway Police Passing-out Prade of 409 junior patrol officers including 36 female officers NHMP training college Sheikhupura.
The IG said they should feel proud that they were part of an organisation which had earned worldwide fame as an honest and professional force


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Police politicisation
IN the wake of the industrial revolution, London transformed from a bucolic setting into a busy commercial metropolis. Taking advantage of the anonymity conferred by a large city and the economic opportunities it created, criminals from all over flocked to this bustling city, triggering unprecedented crimes and disorder.

To maintain the peace, Sir Robert Peele introduced the concept of civilian police tasked exclusively with crime prevention in 1829, thus laying the foundation of the present-day policing system. It was only in 1842 that criminal investigation was entrusted to the police. Since then, London’s metropolitan police has pioneered and refined police systems that are followed by modern forces around the world. In the years that followed, it was British politicians who initiated and nurtured the concept of an autonomous and depoliticised police accountable to the public.

Maintained religiously for more than a century, the police chief’s security of tenure is the pivot of this system. Police commissioners are appointed for a five-year tenure, which gives them sufficient time to determine and implement the force’s objectives in line with the government’s political vision. Despite its share of blame and even scandal, the chief’s security of tenure has strengthened London’s metropolitan police, allowing it to evolve into a strong and professional institution.

In Pakistan, every political party has included police reforms in their manifestos. And in the National Action Plan aimed at dealing with terrorism, all parties agreed to revamp the criminal justice system. True to their manifestos, all new governments have initiated police reforms, resulting in 30 quality reports proffering excellent recommendations. These reports have repeatedly linked the effectiveness of meaningful reforms to the security of tenure of the police chief.
In view of this, it is baffling that despite their consensus on reforming the police, political parties have uniformly acted to obstruct the recommended reforms. The police structure is routinely destabilised through whimsical decisions related to the posting of provincial inspectors general. Obsessed with direct control of the police to influence constituency politics, the political leadership is totally oblivious to on-ground conditions and fails to realise the destructive domino effect of arbitrary IGP postings on the entire governance structure.

In recent decades, Pakistan has experienced rapid urbanisation and a phenomenal increase in the population, thus transforming societal behaviour. These changing dynamics have necessitated a substantial rise in the number of police personnel, thus expanding the command of the IGPs. Punjab has a force of about 180,000, while Sindh has 150,000 personnel, followed by 80,000 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (including erstwhile Fata) and 40,000 in Balochistan.

Armed and disciplined men tasked with preventing and detecting crime, these personnel also maintain order in society and, most importantly, provide security to senior government functionaries including the political leadership. Police in Pakistan have also been at the forefront of countering terrorism. They look up to their chief for protection, support and stability.

Arbitrary decision-making in the posting of police chiefs serves to demoralise the forces under their command and is a major reason for the wayward attitude of the police. It is common knowledge that IGPs are posted without proper process and that every appointment is made in haste without any safeguard for the tenure of this senior assignment. This unpredictable and fragile arrangement creates insecurity for the commanders, an experiential state which permeates to the lower ranks.

The posting of provincial police chiefs is serious business, and it needs to be processed and decided transparently. Despite Police Order, 2002, providing a proper procedure of consultation with a neutral institution to ensure suitable selection based on sound professional input, the procedure has been repeatedly ignored. There are Supreme Court rulings about the process and protection of the tenure of civil servants that have also been disregarded. The situation has progressively deteriorated with successive political governments.

Recently, the transfer of IGPs in the three large provinces has heralded new records of erratic decision-making, with extremely negative ramifications for law enforcement during a challenging period of transition in the country.

In the past two years, five IGPs have been posted in Punjab, whereas in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the number of postings has totalled four. In Sindh, due to resistance by civil society and political parties at the centre, IGP postings have been less frequent, but the provincial government seems to be in perpetual conflict with its own police chief, thus creating chaos in law enforcement. The government must realise that such confusion and disarray in governance is the outcome of flawed decisions that breed uncertainty and are inimical to economic activity.

The much-trumpeted police reforms and rule of law will remain elusive until and unless the government decides to post IGPs in accordance with considerations of merit and professional capabilities. It has to understand that police officers are not the personal servants of the ruling party but rather servants of the state who are mandated to strictly follow the law. The police must be held accountable for any deviation in implementation of these laws. This is achievable, and all that needs to be done is to follow the clearly delineated path of the rule of law.

As an exemplar, London’s metropolitan police have managed this superbly. In our context, the government too should strictly follow the principle of fixed tenure of IGPs. British politicians have done this for more than a century despite the challenges of two world wars and ensuing societal upheavals. If they can do it, our political leadership — which professes commitment to the rule of law and the parliamentary system — can surely follow suit, thus earning the gratitude of the people who have suffered for more than seven decades due to a flawed, compromised and fractured policing system.

The writer is former IGP Sindh and convener of the Police Reforms Committee, Law and Justice Commission.

Published in Dawn, March 16th, 2020
 
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Peshawar police making protective gear by themselves

Manzoor Ali

March 25, 2020

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Policemen wearing protective gear at police lines, Peshawar. —Dawn
PESHAWAR: The Peshawar police have begun making protective medical gear from own resources for the personnel deployed at the local quarantine centres and areas placed under lockdown after the outbreak of coronavirus.

The gear includes surgical masks, gloves and jumpsuits, the police officials told Dawn.

They said the police had produced around 100 jumpsuits before providing them to their personnel deputed at the Douranpour quarantine facility.

A senior official revealed that the city police had provided 30 jumpsuits each to police stations functioning in the city circle.

He said the jumpsuits were being made by the police’s own tailors, which stitched uniforms, on the premises of the police lines in consultation with doctors, while pathogens couldn’t penetrate through their material.

Official says masks, jumpsuits being provided to personnel at quarantine centres, locked-down areas

The official said the gear made by the police was resistant to abrasion during a law and order situation and could be disinfected.

He said such disposal items were very expensive.

The official said the police were also providing face shields and goggles to personnel.

“We’ve utilised own resources to make these protective gear to meet own requirements. The exercise is part of a backup plan to fight the virus,” he said.

The official said if coronavirus broke out in some area, the police had to lock it down, so the police’s personnel should be properly prepared for it.

“You have to quarantine the whole area, where a case of virus pops up,” he said.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for the city police said the police had planned to stitch up to 400 jumpsuits for use by own personnel in quarantine centres and checkpoints set up to protect areas placed under lockdown.

He said currently, the police personnel provided with the protective gear performed duty at the Dourapur quarantine facility, where pilgrims from Taftan border were kept near the limits of Peshawar.

The spokesman said the city police also provided face shields, hand sanitisers and other necessary equipment to their personnel.

He said the patrol force were making announcements on loudspeakers urging people to stay indoors.

“The announcements are being made in cantonment, city and Hayatabad areas. Besides, the police personnel are also informing the residents about proper hygiene to prevent the deadly virus,” he said.

Also in the day, provincial inspector general of police Dr Sanaullah Abbasi directed the police officers to adopt anti-coronavirus standard operating procedures to protect the personnel from coronavirus and ensure initiatives for the security of quarantine centres.

The instructions were issued in a video conference with the regional police officers, a statement issued here said.

Dr Abbasi said the police had to ensure strict action on the instructions issued by the provincial government regarding ban on transport, shopping malls, hotels and restaurants.

The RPOs briefed him about steps taken against coronavirus.

The police chief issued special directives to the officers to keep an eye on militants, drug pushers and anti-social elements to foil their nefarious designs during the outbreak of coronavirus.

He asked the police officers to care for the personnel’s welfare and ensure compliance with precautionary measures against coronavirus.

Dr Abbasi said the steps should be taken in line with the orders issued by the World Health Organisation.

Published in Dawn, March 25th, 2020
 
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