Sierra Leone Police

Sierra Leone Police
Common name Salone Police
Abbreviation (SLP)
Motto A Force for Good
Agency overview
Formed 1894
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Legal jurisdiction Throughout Sierra Leone
Governing body Government of Sierra Leone
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters George Street, Freetown, Sierra Leone
Officers 12,500
Agency executives
  • Francis Alieu Munu, Inspector General of Police
  • Richard Moigbe, Deputy Inspector General of Police
Website
http://www.police.gov.sl/
Footnotes
* Divisional agency: Sub division of the country, over which the agency has usual operational jurisdiction.

The Sierra Leone Police (SLP) is the national police force of the Republic of Sierra Leone, that is primarily responsible for law enforcement and crime investigation throughout Sierra Leone. The paramilitary unit of the Sierra Leone Police is known as the Operational Support Division (OSD).

Sierra Leone Police was established by the British colony back in 1894 and is one of the oldest police forces in West Africa.

Mission

The key mission of the Sierra Leone Police include to prevent crime, to protect life and property, to detect and prosecute offenders, to maintain public order, to ensure safety and security, to enhance access to justice and to ensure police primacy for internal security and safety.

History

A Sierra Leone Police officer of the AMISOM police contingent in Mogadishu.

The Sierra Leone Police (SLP) was established following the founding of the Colony of Freetown in 1808 as a settlement for freed slaves. Police authority then was only restricted to the Colony of Freetown. By 1889 colonial authority had been extended to the provinces. Police authority was also extended to these areas and performed largely paramilitary duties as opposed to the civil police back in the colony. The force at this point became known as the West African Frontier Force.

A Royal Gazette of October 1894 established the Sierra Leone Police Force. Following independence in April 1961, the Sierra Leone Parliament passed the Police Act of 1964 to consolidate and amend the law relating to the organization, discipline, powers and duties of the Sierra Leone Police (SLP).

Efforts were made during the initial post-conflict police reform process to increase the number of women in the police. However, during visits, it was found that newly recruited women police officers were sometimes expected to do little more than cook lunch for their male colleagues.[1]

Organization

The Sierra Leone Police (SLP) is headed by The Inspector General of Police, The professional head of the Sierra Leone Police forces who is appointed by the president of Sierra Leone. The Inspector General of Police is assisted by the Deputy Inspector General of Police. The current Inspector General of the Sierra Leone Police is Francis Alieu Munu. The Deputy Inspector General of Police is Richard Moigbel.

At the national command level, are six Assistant Inspector Generals of Police (AIG) with responsibility for Personnel, Training and Welfare; Operations; Crime Services; Support Services; Professional Standards; and the Operational Support Division (OSD), (the armed wing of the SLP). Regional commanders known as Regpols who are also AIGs carry regional responsibilities for the Western, Northern, Southern and Eastern regions. All of these AIGs assist the IGP and the DIG in the running of the day-to-day affairs of the SLP. This is done through a joined up leadership approach practicalised into an Executive Management and Change Board, the highest policy making body in the organisation which meets once every week under the chairmanship of the IGP.

Each one of Sierra Leone's 12 administrative districts is headed by a local unit commander. The city of Freetown and its Western Area is under the Freetown Metropolitan Police, a branch of the Sierra Leone Police.

Units

The Sierra Leone Police is divided into the following units:

Police Divisions and Leadership

Sierra Leone Police Division SLP Local Unit Commander(LUC)
Inspector General of Police Francis Alieu Munu
Deputy Inspector General of Police Richard Moigbe
SLP Director of Operations Assistant Inspector General Al Shek Kamara
SLP Director of Human Resource Management Assistant Inspector General Alhaji Santigie Ibrahim Sorie Koroma
SLP Director of Support Services Assistant Inspector General Elizabeth A. Turay
SLP Director of Integrated Services Assistant Inspector General Desmond Dowu Buck
SLP Director of Operational Support Division Assistant Inspector General Thomas T. Kamara
SLP Director of Corporate Affairs Chief superintendent Alhaji Amadu Mannah
SLP Regional Commissioner Of the Western Area Metropolitan Police Division Assistant Inspector General Chris Charlie
SLP Regional Commissioner of the Southern Province Police Division Assistant Inspector General David Sesay
SLP Regional Commissioner of the Eastern Province Police Division Assistant Inspector General Sorie B. Kargbo
SLP Regional Commander of the Northern Province Police Division Chief superintendent Joseph Baibai Kabia
SLP District Division SLP Local Unit Commander(LUC)
SLP Bo District Police Division Chief superintendent Theophilus Senessie
SLP Kenema District Police Division Chief superintendent William Fayia Sellu
SLP Kono District Police Division Chief superintendent Amos Kargbo
SLP Port Loko District Police Division Assistant superintendent Foday Dumbuya
SLP Kailahun District Police Division Chief superintendent Mohamed M. Kamara
SLP Koinadugu District Police Division Assistant superintendent Amadu Deen Sesay
SLP Bombali District Police Division Chief superintendent David Sahid Koroma
SLP Moyamba District Police Division Chief superintendent Unisa P. Kamara
SLP Pujehun District Police Division Chief superintendent Jorwulor A. Gbonnoh
SLP Tonkolili District Police Division Chief superintendentAlfred Karrow Kamara
SLP Kambia District Police Division Chief superintendent Fredrick F. Conteh
SLP Bonthe District Police Division Assistant superintendent Samuel Ben Vandi

Sources

  1. Anderlini and Conway, 'Security Sector Reform,' in 'Inclusive Security, Sustainable Peace: A Toolkit for Advocacy and Action,' Hunt Alternative Fund and International Alert, 2004, p.35, in Hendricks and Valsek chapter, Security Sector Transformation in Africa, DCAF, 2007, 74

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.