NAIROBI, Aug. 27 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations has completed the first
10-day training session of the Sudanese joint police unit in Abyei.
A joint news release received here on Wednesday said that the UN Mission in
Sudan (UNMIS) and the UN Development Program (UNDP) have completed the first
10-day training session of members of the new joint integrated police unit in
Abyei.
UNMIS and UNDP said that, in addition to the new police unit, both the
Sudanese government police and the South Sudan police service have agreed to
deploy more members of their forces in the coming weeks to Abyei.
The new unit comprises 63 members of the Sudanese government police and 105
members from the South Sudan police service and is tasked with restoring the
rule of law and ensuring Abyei's security so that the thousands of residents who
fled the town after deadly fighting in May can safely return.
An oil-rich area close to the boundary between north and south Sudan,
Abyei's status was not resolved in the 2005 comprehensive peace agreement(CPA)
which ended the long-running civil war.
But after the eruption of violence in May in Abyei, the government and the
former southern rebels subsequently reached a road map agreement that called
for, among other measures, the establishment and deployment of joint integrated
police units.
Under the basic training course that just ended, UN Police (UNPOL) working
with the mission taught different aspects of policing, including crime scene
investigation, human rights, democratic policing, understanding of the Sudan
Police Act and issues concerning gender and internally displaced persons (IDPs).
Specialized and advanced training courses are also being provided. UNDP
helped organize the training by procuring and delivering the tents, laptop
computers, chairs, stationery and food necessary for the course, at a cost of
about 60,000 U.S. dollars.