Venezuela to overhaul police as homicides soar

CARACAS,  (Reuters) – Beset by one of the world’s  highest murder rates, Venezuela has set a two-year deadline to  clean up its police forces, an official said yesterday, as  the opposition attacked President Hugo Chavez’s record on crime  before a legislative election.

Soraya El Achkar, who heads the government body in charge  of creating a National Police force, said the South American  nation’s city and state police forces had been given strict new  guidelines on weapons and training.

“We are moving from a repressive to a preventative model of  policing,” said El Achkar, a human rights activist who defends  victims of police brutality.

“The police forces have two years to reform.”  If police forces do not meet new requirements such as clear  gun identification and more street patrols before the deadline,  they may disappear, El Achkar said.

The government’s poor record on tackling crime has  dominated the race for Sept. 26 parliamentary elections, with  opposition parties accusing Chavez of doing little about the  problem.

Between 13,000 and 16,000 people were killed last year,  according to leaked police numbers and a nongovernmental  watchdog, respectively.

Chavez’s Socialist Party will see its large parliamentary  majority reduced in the election next month because opposition  parties boycotted the last legislative election five years ago  and partly because of anger about crime.

Yesterday, 100 members of the Primero Justicia opposition  party lay under red-stained sheets with cardboard “gravestones”  outside a government human rights office to protest the number  of homicides.

“We want a country with peace, with justice, tranquillity  and order,” said party chief Julio Borges, who is seeking a  seat in parliament and wants to pass a law to take millions of  illegal weapons off the streets.

The government counters that its shake-up of policing is  already bearing fruit, saying a pilot project of the National  Police had slashed murder and other crime levels by more than  half in Catia, one of Caracas’ most violent slums.

Speaking at a newly founded police university, El Achkar  said the National Police would be extended to 10 crime hot  spots across Venezuela and be the main body policing Caracas by  the end of 2011.

One in five crimes in Venezuela is committed by the police  themselves, according to the Interior Ministry. There are now  138 municipal and state police forces, many inadequately  equipped or trained and accused of corruption.

Policing functions at a national level are currently  carried out by the National Guard unit of the army and an  investigative police force.

The creation of the National Police has been planned for  years and got off the ground in December with the Catia pilot.

There are about 2,300 agents operating in the district,  trained in community policing based on the Police Service of  Northern Ireland and Nicaragua’s National Police, with a focus  on community relations and controlled use of force.