The Gambia Police Force

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Gambia Police Force
AbbreviationGPF
Agency overview
Formed1965
Preceding agencies
Jurisdictional structure
National agency
(Operations jurisdiction)
The Gambia
Operations jurisdictionThe Gambia
Size10,689 square kilometres (4,127 sq mi)
Population1,882,450
Legal jurisdictionThe Gambia
Governing bodyMinister of the Interior
General nature
  • Civilian police
Operational structure
HeadquartersGPF Headquarters, Ecowas Drive
Sworn members5,000
Elected officer responsible
  • Ebrima Mballow, Minister of the Interior
Agency executive
  • Abdoulie Sanyang, Inspector General of Police

The Gambia Police Force is the primary independent domestic intelligence, security and law enforcement agency in The Gambia. Under the Ministry of the Interior, the force is headed by an Inspector General of Police. The current size of the force is 5,000 uniformed and plain-clothed officers. The Gambia Police Force deals with corruption under a specialized Fraud and Commercial crimes unit (Interpol 2018).

History[]

Colonial Gambian police cap badge.

The first police force in The Gambia was the Gambia River Police, formed in 1855. Prior to this, security in the small colonial enclaves was provided by British troops and a small local militia, drawn from traders, freed slaves, and other settlers. The River Police's role was to control smuggling, enforce taxation, and prevent insurgencies. Its 10 men were aided by the local militia, and were further reinforced in 1866 by the establishment of the paramilitary Gambia Constabulary. Initially formed with 40 constables, this was increased to 100 in 1870. At this point, all imperial troops were withdrawn from the colony and policing was left to the Constabulary and local militia.[1][2]

A Frontier Police force was founded in 1895. The establishment of the West African Frontier Force in 1900 led to the creation of the Gambia Company in 1901, which also aided in maintaining the colony's security. In the Protectorate, security was the responsibility of the district chief. In 1909, the British issued an ordinance granting the chiefs to appoint 'badge messengers', who were allowed to keep the peace and had all the same authority of the colony police. Francis has noted how "Although Gambians staffed the lower level of the force, to the local population, the police and security services, limited as they were, represented an essentially foreign presence."[1][2]

At independence in 1965, the Constabulary and Frontier Police merged to create the Gambia Police Force. Following the Gambia Regiment being disbanded in 1958, the police took on all defence responsibilities. A 200-man paramilitary force, the Gambia Field Force, which was part of the police after 1958, maintained responsibility for internal security.[1]

Serekunda Police Station.

Operations[]

The GPF has a Sea Police Patrol Unit as well as a small Air Force, which is not yet operational.[3]

Training[]

The GPF operates the Gambia Police Force Peacekeeping Center (GPFPC), which cooperates with the Peace Operations Training Institute (POTI) in training peacekeepers.[4]

International cooperation[]

Gambia Police Force has been part of Interpol since 6 October 1986. The Interpol National Central Bureau (NCB) for The Gambia is located in the GPF headquarters in Banjul. It is headed by a Commissioner who is assisted by an Assistant Superintendent of Police. Responsibilities of the NCB in The Gambia include human trafficking, terrorism, financial crime, fugitives, stolen works of art, and others.[5]

List of Inspectors General[]

Name Previous role Entered office Left office
Commissioner 2008 2 March 2010
Yankuba Sonko Deputy Inspector General of Police 2 March 2010 27 November 2014
Commissioner of West Coast Region 27 November 2014 13 July 2015
Yankuba Sonko Inspector General of Police 13 July 2015 22 June 2017
Landing Kinteh Commissioner of Prosecutions 22 June 2017 21 June 2018
Deputy Inspector General of Police 9 July 2018 13 March 2021[6]
Abdoulie Sanyang Deputy Inspector General of Police 8 April 2021[7]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Andrade, John (1985). World Police and Paramilitary Forces. Basingstoke: Macmillan. p. 75.
  2. ^ a b Davidheiser, Mark; Hultin, Niklas (2012). Francis, David (ed.). Policing in Africa. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 125–127.
  3. ^ "Gambia Police Force". Access Gambia. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  4. ^ "Gambia Police Force Peacekeeping Center". Peace Operations Training Institute. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  5. ^ "The Gambia Police Force (GPF)". Interpol. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  6. ^ Cham, Pa Modou (15 March 2021). "Police chief Mamour Jobe laid to rest". thepoint.gm. Retrieved 2021-12-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ "New IGP appointed - The Point". thepoint.gm. Retrieved 2021-12-07.

External links[]

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