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The principle law enforcement agency in Burundi is the National Police of Burundi (French: Police Nationale du Burundi, PNB). The police falls within the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Community Development and Regional Administration. The PNB was founded in 2004, following the end of the Burundian Civil War and the Arusha Accords. Its stated objectives are the maintenance of public order, the protection of the population, and the fight against organised crime. Burundi has been a member of INTERPOL since 1970. Burundian police have been deployed abroad as part of United Nations (UN) operations in Africa.
The PNB is divided into missions, dealing with separate areas as well as five regional commissariats. The different services include:
According to Transparency International, in 2014 over 80 percent of Burundians believed that there was corruption within the police service. The Burundian government has tried to resolve the corruption problem with the aid of foreign assistance from countries including the Netherlands. Although little effective citizen oversight exists, there is theoretically a police ombudsman and attorney general, both tasked with dealing with complaints against police.
During the popular unrest in Burundi since 2015, the police have frequently been used to suppress anti-government protests. Police violence against protestors, both in the form of beatings and shootings, was particularly criticised by Human Rights Watch. As a response, in 2016, the UN decided to repatriate 280 Burundian police from the MINUSCA mission in the Central African Republic because of the police had been accused of brutality in Burundi before their departure. Burundi also refused an offer by the UN Security Council to deploy 288 UN police officers to Burundi in August 2016.