Law enforcement in Saint Lucia

Royal Saint Lucia Police Force
Abbreviation RSLPF

Logo of the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force
Agency overview
Formed January 4, 1999
Employees 1,045
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Federal agency Saint Lucia
Size 238 square miles (620 km2)
Population 175,000
General nature
Operational structure
Agency executive Phillip Francois,
Commissioner of Police
Facilities
Stations 14
Website
Official Website

Law enforcement in Saint Lucia is the responsibility of the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force (RSLPF),[1] which was founded in 1834.[2]

Organisation

The Commissioner of Police is Phillip Francois,[3] who commands 947 police officers and civilian employees,[4] in 14 police stations, who serve a resident population of 175,000.[5]

The RSLPF maintains two paramilitary sub organizations; the Special Service Unit, and the Coast Guard, both units are responsible for internal security.[6] Defense is the responsibility of Regional Security System.[7] There is only one non-policing organization under the command of the RSLPF, the Immigration Service.[8]

Police band

The Royal St Lucia Police Band.

The Royal Saint Lucia Police Force includes The Royal Saint Lucia Police Band also known as The Band of the Royal St Lucia Police Force, which is a specialized department within the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force. The Band consists of Police Constables which specialize in Music and Arts.

Band members with the rank of Police Constable or higher are expected to conduct the duties and responsibilities of a regular Police Officer (Law Enforcement) with the exception of Band Cadets and Band Apprentices who are not sworn to oath.

Policing

In 2015 the Saint Lucia police stated that they were under-resourced, with not enough police officers to keep up with the crime case load.[9]

Human rights

The Saint Lucia police have been accused of keeping death lists and carrying out extrajudicial killings of suspected criminals in an attempt to make St Lucia more attractive to tourists.[10] Shootings by police took place in 2010 and 2011 during a security drive called Operation Restore Confidence, which was aimed at reducing violent crime and boosting tourism.[10]

According to an independent report, officers from the Royal St. Lucia Police Force staged a dozen killings of suspected criminals.[10] The police then reported the killings as murders committed by unknown assailants, planting weapons at the scene.[10] In August 2013 the US government suspended assistance to the Saint Lucia police in light of rumors of the extrajudicial killings.[10]

See also

References

External links

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