10 February 2013 – The United Nations in Afghanistan has joined forces with national and international partners to expand and complement existing programmes to strengthen the capacity of women police, and improve access to justice for women and children in local communities of 10 Afghan provinces.
The UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS) is implementing the Afghan Democratic Policing Project (ADPP) with US$ 4.5 million funding support provided by the Government of the Netherlands.
UNAMA’s Police Advisory Unit plays a coordinating role by bringing all stakeholders together. According to A. Heather Coyne, a police adviser with UNAMA, the UN mission advises on the project design and implementation, while UNOPS extends administrative and logistical support.
The three-year project seeks to expand and complement the existing programmes of the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the European Union Police Mission (EUPOL) in the areas of community-police engagement and strengthening the capacity of women police.
The project, which officially started on 3 February, has two-pronged activities: support Afghanistan’s Police-e-Mardumi (community police) teams to conduct police-community consultations and school outreach programmes with a gender focus; and strengthen the capacity of women police to provide services to women victims in collaboration with the UNDP’s Women Police Mentoring Programme.
Ms. Coyne of UNAMA said the project aimed to achieve the goal of improving accountability and responsiveness of police to their communities, particularly by strengthening women police, which in turn is expected to enhance access to justice for women and children in the local communities.
There are just over 1,500 women police personnel in the 149,000-strong Afghan National Police force. However, traditionally most of the women police personnel have been doing jobs other than direct policing – for example: sewing police uniforms.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in his report to the Security Council in December 2012 that UNAMA continued to facilitate the coordination of international resources to assist Afghan authorities in strengthening the recruitment and capacity of female police officers and to raise awareness among male officers about the importance of integrating women into the police force as equal members.
Afghanistan’s Ministry of Interior (MoI) decided in 2010 to increase the number of women police force to 5,000 by 2015. “However, they are far behind the schedule,” said Ms. Coyne.
The primary focus of the ADPP will be in seven Afghan provinces where EUPOL and MoI have launched community policing pilots: Balkh, Kunduz, Bamyan, Baghlan, Ghor, Helmand and Uruzgan. Additionally, it is expected that some activities will reach into other key urban areas where women police are concentrated, such as Kabul, Nangarhar and Herat.
In October last year, while addressing a meeting of senior police officers, the Minister of Interior, Gen. Mujtaba Patang, said community-based policing was one of 10 priorities of the ANP. In the same month, the MoI – together with UNDP and other partners – launched a police women mentoring programme, aimed at building the capacity of female police officers, addressing violence against women and raising awareness among male officers of the importance of integrating women into the police force as equal members.
By UNAMA Kabul