Peace & Stability Journal Special 25th Anniversary Edition | Page 12

government should be doing, this can lead to greater account- ability within the criminal justice system. ICITAP’s program in Indonesia worked with the Indonesia National Police (INP) to develop a Use of Force (UoF) policy. The UoF project began at the end of 2007 and the INP intro- duced the UoF policy in January 2009 after extensive vetting, including review by NGOs and other civil society actors. In May 2009, ICITAP trained 20 INP master instructors in the UoF policy, and these master instructors participated in an extensive train-the-trainer program. Through this cascade effect, the INP trained more than 80,000 of its 421,000 police in the UoF policy by the end of 2009. In 2012, the UoF policy was formally institutionalized into the curriculum of all 30 of the INP’s Basic Police Academies. This program resulted in the INP developing a sustainable policy to educate the entire police force in applying the use of force to the appropriate degree in a wide variety of circumstances. In 2003, ICITAP worked with the Tanzania Police Force (TPF) to develop a new POM plan/policy. The POM policy in force at the time was developed by the British in 1959, before Tanzania achieved its independence from the UK. Once the new POM policy was accepted, ICITAP worked with the TPF to develop and conduct POM training for police at the line, mid-level, and command officer levels. The US Embassy in Tan- zania reported that the TPF handled POM well before, during and after the 2005 national elections, as opposed to their poor handling of the 2000 elections. ICITAP worked closely with authorities in Bosnia and Herze- govina (BiH) to develop sustainable and effective public order management training that provided police with the skills they needed to deal effectively with crowds during protests and emergencies. ICITAP realized that in order to promote sustain- able institutional development in terms of emergency man- agement and public order management, there needed to be an effective communication and coordination element within the BiH Government. Also, it was absolutely critical for the BiH Government to buy into, not only the concept of the projects, but also the process for achieving them. This meant that while ICITAP could play an important advising and facilitation role, the BiH Government would need to drive the process and take ownership of the results. ICITAP used a strategic three-pronged approach to develop and support projects in BiH, that combined (1) a needs assess- ment, (2) host-nation instructors, and (3) certified curricula. To develop the public order management program, ICITAP worked with senior BiH police leadership to identify experi- enced officers as potential instructors and provided them with instructor development training. These officers then received public order management training, which was developed locally with ICITAP facilitation. Finally, they became public order management master instructors in the Bosnian law enforcement agencies, institutionalizing the training in all three BiH law enforcement academies. As a result of ICITAP’s efforts, BiH law enforcement agencies, which previously operated without certified instructors, now have a cadre of 317 officers who are certified as instructors in areas such as crowd control, basic first aid, and tactical trauma management. The ICITAP – BiH developmental model relies on direct en- gagement with in-country law enforcement colleagues and part- ners, through working groups, in all aspects of the development process. This ensures that project outcome is tailored to the sit- uation in the country, is relevant and useful, and is sustainable. There is “ownership” of the entire process by the in- country law enforcement institutions; as ICITAP BiH Program Manager Bennett explains, “People support what they help create!” In 2008, the ICITAP program in Nepal worked with the Home Ministry to develop an election security working group that included all Government of Nepal (GON) officials and security forces commanders under a chairperson, who was the elections commissioner, appointed by the prime minister. This working group established coordinated support for the development and governmental support for all education, training, planning and operational security and communications related to the elec- tions. ICITAP helped the police develop a POM plan with tailored training for the realities of Nepal, and then presented the training. A joint elections operations center was developed that included both security forces and the elections commission in one ministry building. The Government of Nepal built election command centers for both police agencies that fall under the Home Ministry, and those under the main Nepal Police Head- quarters. These election command centers linked the elections commission’s joint elections operations center ( JEOC) to re- gional and local elections offices by way of wide band net-wire- less connectivity. From 2011-2012 ICITAP worked with the Sierra Leone Police on an election security program that was funded by USAID. The project emphasized roll call training (10-30 minute mod- ules) that started with a role play and included teaching meth- odologies such as photographic posters and Socratic dialogue, in addition to rote lecture. The project had three phases. From September 3-7, 2012 (Phase 1), ICITAP Associate Director 10