Puneet Varma (Editor)

Zimbabwe Republic Police

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Abbreviation
  
ZRP

Sworn members
  
19,500 (2000)

National agency
  
Zimbabwe

Minister responsible
  
Ignatious Chombo

Legal personality
  
Governmental: Government agency

General nature
  
Law enforcement Civilian police

The Zimbabwe Republic Police (or ZRP) is the national police force of Zimbabwe, known until July 1980 as the British South Africa Police.

Contents

Structure

The force consists of at least 39,000 officers and is head-quartered in Harare at the Police General Headquarters (PGHQ)[1]. The force is organised by province, and comprises uniformed national police referred to as Duty Uniform Branch ( DUB ), the plain clothes comprisedCriminal Investigation Department ( CID ) and Police Internal Security Intelligence (PISI ), and traffic police (part of DUB. To date, there are 17 known provinces which are headed by a Senior Assistant Commissioner. It also includes specialist support units including the (paramilitary) Police Support Unit and riot police, a Police Internal Security and Intelligence unit (the equivalent of the Rhodesian Special Branch); and ceremonial and canine units. Overall command of the force is exercised by the Commissioner General Doctor Augustine Chihuri. He is deputised by four Deputy Commissioner generals who form part of the Central Planning Committee (CPC) a decision passing body in the ZRP. The deputy commissioner generals are also deputised by five commissioners. This structure makes the Commissioner General, a five star general.

Formation and Africanisation

The predecessor of the Zimbabwe Republic Police was the British South Africa Police of Rhodesia and the interim state of Zimbabwe Rhodesia.

Following independence in 1980, the force had a strength of about 9,000 regular personnel and a further 25,000 police reservists (nearly half of whom were white Zimbabweans of European ancestry). After independence, the force followed an official policy of "Africanisation", in which senior white officers were retired, and their positions filled by black officers. In 1982, Wiridzayi Nguruve, who had joined the force as a Constable in 1960, became the first black commissioner of the force. He was then succeeded by Henry Mkurazhizha.

Zimbabwe's serving police commissioner is Augustine Chihuri. He was succeeded in January 2015 by Major General Trust Mugova of the Zimbabwe National Army.

Criticism

Since 2000, the ZRP has faced criticism from Zimbabwean and international NGOs such as Amnesty International for alleged political bias and what is claimed to be its part in what many describe as a systematic violation of rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly [2]. The Commissioner of the ZRP, Augustine Chihuri, is open about his political loyalty to President Robert Mugabe's administration, saying in 2001 "Many people say I am ZANU-PF. Today, I would like to make it public that I support ZANU-PF because it is the ruling party. If any other party comes to power, I will resign and let those who support it take over". Police corruption is said to be rife.

References

Zimbabwe Republic Police Wikipedia