- Royal Falkland Islands Police
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Royal Falkland Islands Police
Area coveredArea Falkland Islands Size 12,173 km2 (4,700 sq mi) Population 3,150 residents (approx), plus military garrison Operations Formed 1846 HQ Stanley Officers 18 Stations 1 Website http://www.falklands.gov.fk/police.php The Royal Falkland Islands Police is the territorial police force responsible for law enforcement within the Falkland Islands. The Force was established on 1 November 1846 with the appointment of Francis Parry as Chief Constable. The Constables Ordinance 1846, which had been enacted by the colony's Legislative Council on 27 October of that year, created an organisation that has remained at the service of the public ever since. The current Chief Police Officer is Chief Superintendent Gary Finchett, latterly of Cheshire Constabulary.[1] who is also the Director of Community Safety.
Contents
History
The Falkland Islands Police Force was granted the "Royal" prefix by HM The Queen on 1 January 1992. This followed an inspection by the Deputy Inspector General of Dependent Territories Police and was granted in recognition of 146 years of loyal service to the Crown and of the professional standards achieved by the force in the ten years since its virtual destruction by the Argentine occupation of the Falkland Islands in 1982.
Duties
The Royal Falkland Islands Police uphold Falklands Islands law (a combination of local ordinances and adopted English Statute Law) and are governed by the Police Ordinance 2000. Codes of practice are published originating from the Criminal Justice Ordinance 1989. All equipment issued to officers and practices used comply with Home Office and Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) guidelines.
Forces and coverage
The Royal Falkland Islands Police currently has an establishment of nine Constables, a number of Reserve Constables (similar to UK Special Constables), three Sergeants, one operations, one training and one Detective Sergeant an Inspector and a Chief Superintendent who is the Director of Community Safety and Chief Police Officer. Two civilian police staff are employed one as Senior Clerk and the other as Licensing Officer. The Islands' Prison is contained within the police building and governed by the Chief Police Officer.
All Service Police serving with the Joint Service Police Support Unit (JSPSU) of British Forces Falkland Islands are sworn in as Royal Falkland Islands Police Reserve Constables and thus have civil as well as military policing powers on the islands[2].
An Island-wide service is provided with 24-hour cover. The control desk maintains a listening watch on marine and civilian emergency radio frequencies and is the terminus of the "999" emergency telephone system.
Police equipment is purchased directly from suppliers or through the Devon and Cornwall Constabulary with whom an affiliation has been formed since 1990. Officers do not ordinarily carry firearms however they are issued with, and trained in; Quickcuffs, extendible "ASP" baton, the same as mainland British Police Forces
The transport fleet consists of one Land Rover 90, Land Rover 110 for rural patrols, a major incident control vehicle and two Land Rover Discoveries, as general patrol vehicles.
Communication is based on VHF FM radio and is encrypted. The use of a repeater greatly extends the range of coverage.
Headquarters
The police station, which has remained the headquarters building since it was completed in 1873, is situated centrally in Stanley. The building, which has had several wooden extensions added over the years, was built of stone by the detachment of Royal Marines that were stationed in the Colony at that time. The station took a direct hit from a British missile during the Falklands Conflict on 11 June 1982 and was severely damaged. The fabric of the building was repaired but after 135 years of continual service it was totally refurbished in 2008. This was completed in 2009 with the new jail being opened by HRH Princess Anne on 24 March 2009 [3].
References
- ^ "Royal Falkland Islands Police Force". http://www.falklands.gov.fk/police.php. "Chief Superintendent Gary Finchett recently joined the force as Chief Police Officer, having served in the Cheshire Police for 31 years."
- ^ "A Concise History of the Royal Air Force Police". http://www.rafpa.com/history.htm. "Joint Service Police Unit (JSPSU) under the command of an RAF Provost Sqn Ldr. All personnel sworn in as Royal Falkland Islands Police Reserve Constables."
- ^ http://en.mercopress.com/2009/03/27/falkland-islands-weekly-penguin-news-update4
External links
Crown dependencies Overseas territories Anguilla · Bermuda · British Indian Ocean Territory · British Virgin Islands · Cayman Islands · Falkland Islands · Gibraltar (civilian police) · Gibraltar (defence police) · Montserrat · Pitcairn Islands · St. Helena · Sovereign Base Areas · Turks & CaicosFormer dependent territories Barbados · Hong KongLaw enforcement in South America Sovereign states Dependencies and
other territories- Aruba
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- Categories:
- Police forces of UK Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories
- Politics of the Falkland Islands
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