Maldives Police Service
Maldives Police Service ދިވެހި ފުލުހުންގެ ޚިދުމަތް | |
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Motto | To Protect and Serve. |
Agency overview | |
Formed | 1 September, 2004 |
Preceding agency |
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Employees | 10000+ |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Population | 517,887 (January 2023 est.) |
Legal jurisdiction | Republic of Maldives |
Constituting instrument |
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General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | Shaheed Hussain Adam Building, Boduthakurufaanu Magu, Malé, Maldives |
Elected officer responsible |
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Agency executives |
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Parent agency | Ministry of Homeland Security And Technology |
Facilities | |
Police Stations | 155+ including Police Desks |
Website | |
police.gov.mv |
The Maldives Police Service (Dhivehi: ދިވެހި ފުލުހުންގެ ޚިދުމަތް, romanized: dhivehi fuluhunge khidhumaiy) is the civilian national police force of the Republic of Maldives. It is responsible for enforcing criminal and traffic law, enhancing public safety, maintaining order and keeping the peace throughout Maldives. The organization comes under the control of the Ministry of Homeland Security And Technology.
History
[edit]A Police force was established by Law on 29 March 1933, during the reign of Al-Sultan Muhammad Shamsuddeen III. The service consisted initially of 120 officers, organised into duty shifts. Officers were issued with uniforms of Maldivian Traditional Dress of Mundu and Libaas plus black cap, belt and straps on duty. They were equipped with batons and issued whistles for communication. Their duty was to patrol the market area and the island. In other words, establishing peace amongst the citizens and protecting the people and their belongings. The law that established police on 29 March 1933 by Sultan Mohamed Shamsudhdheen, has never been cancelled by any of the historical writings seen so far. It is known that Police and Military were separate organizations when they first formed.
The Police worked with the assistance of the Military when needed, the protection and help of military was available as the Law stated . During the earlier days of Police, there was violence between the foreign investors and the Maldivians. The foreigners stopped business with Maldivians and closed their shops which caused the Maldivians to suffer. The Police tried their best to control the situation, but needed the help of the Military. The Military helped the Police in their full strength and finally brought the situation under control. That was on 15 May 1933.
The initial Investigation office was small with only three investigation tables . The three tables in the investigating office represented three sections of the service; Theft, Political and Serious Crimes. The office was mostly painted in green which is why the place was also called the Green Office. In 1970 Police office was changed to the building that has since become the Bandara Koshi library. New sections formed; Traffic Control and road accidents were being monitored by the police. The police force was soon disbanded although the initial law was not revoked. The police force was formally re-established on 13 March 1972, as a branch of the security force, which were then known as National Guards, functioning under the Ministry of Public Safety.
The operating procedures of service established in 1933 were maintained until the election of Maumoon Abdul Gayoom on 11 November 1978. When the force was re-structured under Ministry of Defense and National Security on 10 January 1979, National Guards were renamed as National Security Service. Since the organization was expanding, the lack of space in the building was experienced. As a result, finally, in 1985 the headquarters was re-located to the building of the current Ministry of Defense and National Security. Apart from an Admin Section, five investigation sections were formed.
And in 1992 a Police Inspector from the West Yorkshire Police named David Price introduced the modern working structure of the Police, introducing Police beats and mobile patrols. Police shifted to Shaheedh Hussain Adam Building in 1999 and on 1 September 2004 Maldives Police Service was formed under the Ministry of Home Affairs which was a major functional shift of the present administration. National Security Service was later renamed as Maldives National Defence Force.
On 1 July 2013 police reserve force known as the Special Constabulary was inaugurated. And on 23 July 2013 first official ceremony to commemorate the Police Memorial Day was held. The Police Memorial Day is an annual nationwide event which aims to remember, honour and pay respects to each and every Police Officer who lost their lives in the line of duty. And on the same day Police Memorial Wall was inaugurated to honour the members of the Maldives Police Service who lost their lives in the line of duty.
Organization structure
[edit]Source:[2]
Commissioners Bureau
[edit]- Executive Support Services
- International Relations Department
- Police Media Center
- Grievance Officer
Organisational Reform and Development
[edit]- Strategic Planning Department
- Legal Department
Professional Standards Command
[edit]- Administration Unit
- Internal Investigation Unit
- Quality Assessment and Awareness unit
Directorate of Intelligence
[edit]- Bureau of Internal Security
- Bureau of External Security
- Signals Intelligence Command
- State Political Police Command
Crime Investigation Command
[edit]- Drug Enforcement Department
- Economic Crime Department
- Family & Child Protection Department
- Major Crime Management Center
- General Investigation Department
- Anti-Human Trafficking Unit
- Victim Support Unit
Internal Security Command
[edit]- Male’ City Police
- Traffic Management Department
- Industrial Security Department
- Special Operations Department
- Police Communication Center
- Major Events
- HULHUMALE POLICE
Divisional Operations Command
[edit]- NORTHERN OPERATIONS
- Upper North Police Division
- North Police Division
- North Central Police Division
- SOUTHERN OPERATIONS
- Central Police Division
- South Central Police Division
- Upper South Police Division
- South Police Division
Specialist Support
[edit]- Forensic Services
- Information & Communication Technology Services
- Police Custodial Department
- Marine Police Department
Staff Welfare and Finance Management
[edit]- Finance and Asset Management
- Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Services
- Public Affairs Department
- Human Resource Development
Support Services
[edit]- Logistic Services
- Police Medical Services
- Uniform & Accessories Department
- Police Club
- Police Family Association
- PCCC Club
Training and Development
[edit]- National College of Policing and Law Enforcement
Rank structure Before 2020
[edit]Commissioner | Superintendent | Inspector | ||||||||
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Maldives Police Service[3] | ||||||||||
Commissioner of police | Deputy commissioner | Assistant commissioner | Chief superintendent | Superintendent of police | Chief inspector of police | Inspector of police | Sub inspector of Police |
Station inspector | Sergeant | Other | |||||
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Maldives Police Service[3] | No insignia | ||||||
Police chief station inspector | Police station inspector | Police staff sergeant | Sergeant | Police corporal | Police lance corporal | Police constable |
Medals and ribbons
[edit]Source:[4]
Medals
[edit]National Level Medals
- Medal of Honor
- Presidential Medal
- Medal for Exceptional Bravery
- Medal for Bravery
- 3 November Medal
- Purple Heart
- Long Service Medal
- Independence 50 Medal
- Republic 50 Medal
- Tsunami Medal
Service Level Medals
- Distinguished Service Medal
- Police Service Medal
- Gold Life Saving Medal
- Silver Life Saving Medal
- Dedicated Service Medal
- Good Conduct Medal
- Police Medal
Ribbons
[edit]National Level Ribbons
- Presidential Ribbon
Service Level Ribbons
- Long Service Ribbon
- Ribbon of Bravery
- Dedicated Service Ribbon
- Police Service Ribbon
- Good Conduct Ribbon
- Special Duty Ribbon
- Achievement Gold Ribbon
- Achievement Silver Ribbon
- Ribbon of Skill
- Ribbon of Drill
- Ribbon OF Great Discipline
Vehicles
[edit]- 10x Toyota Hilux Japan (Transport)
- 17x Isuzu D-Max Japan (Equipment Transport)
- 115x+ Airblade 125 Philippines (Traffic Patrol) More New Models To Be Delivered City/Some Islands
- 55+ Mazda6 Japan City Police
- 95+ Suzuki GN125 India Japan Island Patrol
- 47X RHIB
- 55+ Speedboats Maldives India
- 155x Honda CBX 350 Japan ( Some Retired)
- 25x Yamaha FJR1300 Japan (For Vip Escort & Special Missions)
- 35x BMW R1200RT Germany (Sinamalé Bridge Traffic And Special Escorts)
- 11x Ford Transit (Forensics Missions)
- 14x Isuzu Elf (Modified Especially For Riot Police )
- 8x Honda Accord ( For the VIP Transport Of Higher Police Officials And Families)
- 2x Jeep Wrangler ( Dangerous Criminal Transport & Vip Criminal transport)
- 23x Mitsubishi Outlander ( Hulhumale City Traffic Patrol 24/7)
- 21x Polaris RZR ( Vilimale & Hulhumale Patrol)
- 2x PSC patrol craft ( Maritime Cyclone Patrol )
- 5x PGR patrol craft (Unknown)
- 3x Gading Marine FAC PC 31 ( Central atoll patrol)
- 90+ DJI Mavic (Special Missions)
References
[edit]- ^ "Maldives Police Service Act (Dhivehi)". mvlaw.gov.mv. Law No. 34/2020. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
- ^ Infrastructure, Police Information. "Maldives Police Service". www.police.gov.mv. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
- ^ a b "Rank Insignias". Maldives Police Official Website. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
- ^ Infrastructure, Police Information. "Maldives Police Service". www.police.gov.mv. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
This article has an unclear citation style. (November 2014) |
"Police Clearance Certificate". Maldives High Commission, London. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
"The World Factbook - Maldives". Central Intelligence Agency, US. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
"INTERPOL Member Countries - Maldives". INTERPOL. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
"Maldives Police Empowered by Exadata: The Back Story". Oracle Media Network. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
"US Embassy Conducts Anti-Terrorism Assistance Program for Maldivian Police Service". United States Virtual Presence Post - USVPP. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
"80th Anniversary of Maldives Police Service". Haveeru Online. Archived from the original on 25 May 2014. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
"Unveiling of Police Memorial Wall". Haveeru Online. Archived from the original on 25 May 2014. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
External links
[edit]* Official Website | : www.police.gov.mv |
* Official Institute | : www.isles.edu.mv |
* Official News Website | : www.policelife.mv |
Further reading
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