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Afghanistan Initiative Seeks District-by-District Police Reform
American Forces Press Service ^

Posted on 02/22/2008 3:18:49 PM PST by SandRat

HERAT, Afghanistan, Feb. 22, 2008 – On the outside, they look like any other policemen in Afghanistan, but if U.S. Army Col. James Klingaman is right, this group of 143 newly trained Afghan National Police might prove to be the best in Afghanistan.

Click photo for screen-resolution image
Army Col. James Klingaman, commander of Afghanistan Regional Security Integration Command West, congratulates an Afghan national policeman from western Afghanistan’s Bala-Beluk district. The 143 police officers are the first graduating class for an eight-week police training course that is a key part of the Afghan Interior Ministry’s focused district development reform initiative, designed to improve the rule of law throughout the country, district by district. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USN
  

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.
Klingaman, commander of Afghanistan Regional Security Integration Command West, addressed the new police officers at their graduation Feb. 21. This was the first Afghan National Police class for the Afghan government’s focused district development initiative to be trained in Herat.

The initiative is a reform by the Afghan Interior Ministry designed to improve policing in Afghanistan district by district. It was developed by Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan officials to address issues of inadequate training, poor equipment and corruption, which made it difficult for the police to provide public safety and internal security.

These police officers from the Bala-Beluk district in western Afghanistan have just graduated from Phase 3, in which their entire district was reorganized, re-equipped and retrained during an eight-week course. Civilian police instructors teach the initiative’s courses at eight regional training centers throughout the country.

Phase 4 will involve re-inserting the new police officers back into their districts, which should take about a week and will be the initiative’s true test, said Army Col. Peter W. Foreman, deputy to the commanding general for police development for Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan.

“The real test will be this next week, when the police go back to their districts and we see how the people perceive them,” Foreman said.

The policemen won’t go back to Bala-Beluk alone. A mentoring team of U.S. soldiers will be there to help them use their newly taught policing skills. The senior enlisted mentor for that team is Army Master Sgt. John Welgos, who reminded the graduating class of their responsibility to protect the public.

“The eyes of the people will watch you closely,” he said. “Stay on the path of good.”

(From a Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan news release.)
Related Sites:
Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan
Combined Joint Task Force 82
Click photo for screen-resolution image Army Master Sgt. John Welgos, the senior enlisted mentor for a police mentoring team, congratulates the Bala-Beluk district police chief after he and more than 140 other policemen from the district – including the chief’s son -- graduated from an eight-week police training course that is a key part of the Afghan Interior Ministry’s focused district development reform initiative, designed to improve the rule of law throughout the country district by district. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USN   
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Click photo for screen-resolution image Army Col. Peter W. Foreman, deputy to the commanding general for police development for Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan, speaks to a graduating class of Afghan national policemen. The 143 police officers from Bala-Beluk district in western Afghanistan are the first graduating class for an eight-week police training course that is a key part of the Afghan Interior Ministry’s focused district development reform initiative, designed to improve the rule of law throughout the country district by district. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USN   
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TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Government; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; frwn; reform; taliban

1 posted on 02/22/2008 3:18:52 PM PST by SandRat
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2 posted on 02/22/2008 3:19:09 PM PST by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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