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In 2005, the Interpol-United Nations Security Council special notice was created at the request of the UN Security Council through Resolution 1617 to provide better tools to help the Security Council carry out its mandate regarding the freezing of assets, travel bans, and arms embargoes aimed at individuals and entities associated with Al-Qaeda ...
The Interpol Watch List is a centralized list of those persons who are subject to Interpol notices issued for arrest (red), location (blue) and information (green). Additionally, the Terrorism Watch List includes passports reported stolen. The Watch List is available for police officers given special access codes. [1]
Interpol issues eight types of Interpol notices, seven of which are: red, blue, green, yellow, black, orange, and purple. An eighth special notice is issued at the special request of the United Nations Security Council. [27] As of 2019, there are currently 62,448 valid Red and 12,234 Yellow notices in circulation. [28]
Interpol has come a long way in preventing abuse by Russia and others of its "red notice" system where a country asks others to arrest a suspect, and cannot do much more for now to improve it, the ...
This required improved cooperation with Interpol to tackle these crimes effectively. Following the 2008 Mumbai attacks, India began to depend more on Interpol for sharing intelligence and tracking global terrorist networks. Issuing Red Notices for wanted suspects and working closely with countries like the U.S. and U.K. became common practice.
These include Red Notice alerts that Interpol publishes at the request of any of its 196 member countries. Red Notices are not arrest warrants , but more like digital “wanted person” posters.
Fifty politicians from 20 countries, including Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Rep. Mike ... by Moroccan authorities in July under a “since deleted” Interpol red notice requested by China. ...
There is no official worldwide list of most wanted fugitives. [1] Interpol publishes a list of "red notices" identifying and describing fugitive persons who are wanted by a national jurisdiction and are being sought internationally for capture and extradition. This is, however, an inclusive list rather than a "most wanted" list.