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Nakong Police Agency

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Nakong Police Agency
內江警察部隊
File:Nakong Police Agency badge.svg
AbbreviationNKPA
Agency overview
Formed1899 (as Nakong Constabulary)
1955 (unified and renamed)
Preceding agencies
  • Nakong Constabulary
  • Ning Chow Police
  • Lin Chow Area Police Force
  • Queensport Constabulary
Employees47,670
Legal personalityPolice force
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionNakong
Size40,015.36 km2 (15,450.02 sq mi)
Population15,901,548
Governing bodyDepartment of State for Public Security
Operational structure
Headquarters1 Police Square
Queensport, Nakong
Minister responsible
  • Peter Lim, Minister of Public Security
Agency executive
  • Margaret Chan, Commissioner
Website
police.nk
Nakong Police Agency
Simplified script
内江警察部队
Traditional script
內江警察部隊
Literal meaningNakong police force
Transcriptions
Putonghua
FuhaoNèijiāng jǐngchá bùduì
Paisha
Morwallnoi6 gong1 ging2 chaat3 bou6 deui2

The Nakong Police Agency (NKPA; Shangean: 內江警察部隊; Morwall romanization: noi6 gong1 ging2 chaat3 bou6 deui2) is the national police force of Nakong, with responsibility for local policing, tactical response, counter-terrorism, VIP protection and counter-intelligence across the country. Organized into a number of local detachments and national commands, the Nakong Police Agency is a large and decentralized division of the Department of State for Public Security which works closely with the counties and municipalities of Nakong. The commanding officer of the NKPA is Margaret Chan, who has been in office since 2019.

Founded by Estmere in 1899 as the Nakong Constabulary, the force initially was responsible for enforcing colonial law in rural areas of Nakong while urban communities had standalone police forces. During the Great War, the Nakong Constabulary was placed under Estmerish military command and played a key role in the Battle of Nakong. Following the establishment of the Nakong Free State, the Nakong Constabulary was merged with the local police forces of Ningcho, Lin Chow County and Queensport to form the Nakong Police Agency. After independence in 1958, the Nakong Territorial Defence Regiment colonial militia force also fell under the NKPA's command.

In 1963, the emergence of the East Nakong insurgency resulted in police resources being stretched to the breaking point by ever-mounting counter-insurgency needs. As a result, the quasi-military Special Territorial Branch was spun off as the independent Nakong Autonomous Security Force, ending the NKPA's five-year stint as Nakong's de facto military. During the 1960s and 70s, the NKPA played a major role in dismantling the Shangean unionist movement on the island, during which time the agency was accused of engaging in arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance and other human rights violations. Since the return of peace in the 1980s, the NKPA has largely shed its paramilitary functions and embarked on a community policing strategy to promote crime reduction and build public trust.

The Nakong Police Agency is one of four law enforcement agencies in Nakong, together with the National Investigative Agency (which investigates public corruption and organized crime), the Nakong Customs Agency (which manages border control), and the Security Force Provost (which handles military policing). The NKPA also works closely with the Nakong Overseas Security Agency, Nakong's foreign intelligence agency, and the Nakong Rescue Agency, Nakong's firefighting and ambulance service. The NKPA maintains fraternal ties with Estmere's Federal Police Force and Senria's National Police.

History

Early years

From the establishment of the South Seas Colony, law enforcement in Nakong was the responsibility of the Estmerish military, with army regiments dispersed over vast regions of the island to ensure compliance with colonial legislation. This arrangement was deemed a hindrance to military readiness, as the scattered deployment made it difficult to muster units in the event of war or unrest. This problem was made evident during the 1893 Longwan uprising, when striking labourers working on the Estmerish fleet's new anchorage seized the work camp and held it for 37 days against piecemeal counter-attacks.

In response, Governor General Lord Ashley ordered the creation of professional local police forces in Ningcho, Patlin and the newly established administrative seat of Queensport. He also decreed in 1899 the establishment of a Nakong Constabulary to assume responsibility for policing in all rural areas. The first commissioner of the Nakong Constabulary was Sir Frederick Moore, who moved to eliminate corruption and local favouritism within police ranks by instituting a billeting system whereby constables and their families are rotated every two years between communities as to avoid developing long-term relationships that undermine the police's neutrality—a system which survives in a modified form to this day for junior constables.

Upon the outbreak of the Great War in 1927, the Nakong Constabulary was transferred to the control of the Estmerish military's Nakong Joint Headquarters and constables were given rudimentary militia training in anticipation of an Entente invasion. During the subsequent Battle of Nakong, constables fought a costly delaying action in San Hau to allow the bulk of Estmerish forces in Ningcho to evacuate southward to Patlin. Throughout the occupation of Nakong, many constables joined up with the Nakong Liberation Army and mounted a guerilla warfare campaign against occupation forces.

1955–present

After the creation of the Nakong Free State in 1951, the newly elected Self-Determination Congress decided to consolidate Nakong's various colonial police and paramilitary forces into a centralized agency. To this end, the Nakong Constabulary merged with the local police forces of Ningcho, Lin Chow County and Queensport to create the Nakong Police Agency in 1955. Upon independence in 1958, Estmere ceased to have responsibility for Nakongese defence, and the military units of the Nakong Territorial Defence Regiment were subsumed under the Nakong Police Agency as the new, paramilitary Special Territorial Branch.

Following the Patlin general strike of 1962, Shangean unionist unrest grew rapidly and widespread violence in eastern Nakong resulted in the East Nakong insurgency. The NKPA proved incapable of balancing its local policing duties with the need to command a complex counter-insurgency military operation, and the decision was taken in 1963 to separate the Special Territorial Branch into a separate Nakong Autonomous Security Force (NASF). The NASF assumed responsibility for national defence, allowing the NKPA to focus on internal security and crime prevention.

Throughout the 1960s and 70s, the continuing Shangean unionist insurgency and the invasion scare triggered by the 1975 Coastal Crisis led the government to impose an indefinite state of emergency and grant extraordinary counter-terrorism powers to the Nakong Police Agency. The NKPA used these powers to indefinitely detain thousands of suspected unionists and Shangean agents without trial, suspending the writ of habeas corpus. During this time, the NKPA also used force to disperse peaceful protests and mass surveillance to intimidate independent media and opposition parties. Between 1963 and 1979, the NKPA has also been credibly implicated by international human rights bodies in the enforced disappearance of at least 30 people, though the agency strongly contests these reports.

After the demise of the insurgency in the 1980s, the NKPA began to shed its militarized approach and undertook a transformation under the leadership of Commissioner Peter Tam into a modern civilian police force based on community policing principles. Many counter-insurgency units were dissolved or significantly reduced, while policies were implemented to improve police accountability and better protect civil liberties. In 1993, the office of the Police Ombudsman of Nakong was created as a standing mechanism to investigate misconduct in the ranks of the NKPA, though its independence from police leadership has been questioned by the International Council for Democracy. In 1999, the Serious Crimes Unit of the NKPA, responsible for investigating public corruption and organized crime, was split off into a separate National Investigative Agency in response to the Seikung bribery scandal.

In 2002, a Digital Crimes Unit was established within the Nakong Police Agency to investigate cyber-crime. Today, the NKPA employs over 47,000 uniformed and civilian personnel and has a presence in all communities and ports of entry of Nakong.

Governance

Leadership

Roles and structure

Ranks

Equipment

File:Nakong Police car.png
A typical Nakong Police Agency Seikung Primus XL vehicle in service with the Ningcho community patrol division

See also