Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The judicial police branch is responsible for criminal investigations, working in close coordination with the Office of the Public Prosecutor in the Ministry of Justice. Police are assigned to the capitals of the wilayat are under the nominal control of the individual governors. A special riot police force is equipped with modern riot-control gear.
DGSN may refer to: Direction Générale de Surêté Nationale , or Sûreté Nationale (Morocco) Direction Générale de Surêté Nationale , the Algerian police
In addition to the police and military, Algerian law enforcement operates several Intelligence agencies to further maintain internal security and external threats. Military security remains responsible to the Algerian Government , in the monitoring and maintenance of data sources and files relevant to potential sources of opposition to national ...
The Police for Radio Communications (French: Police des communications radioélectriques, PCR), colloquially known as the "radio center", is the DGST's signal intelligence (SIGINT) directorate. [4] [3] [11] The directorate intercepts thousands of communications per day, including phone calls, text messages, faxes, and e-mails. [4] [13]
On May 16, 1956, a year after Morocco gained independence, the DGSN was formed. [18] The Royal Institute of Police in Kenitra was inaugurated in 1978. [19] The Scientific and Technical Police Laboratory in Casablanca was created in 1991. [19] On 8 September 2023, an earthquake with a magnitude of 6.8 M w hit Marrakesh-Safi region of Morocco.
Sûreté, the organizational title of a civil police force in many French-speaking countries or regions; Directorate-General for External Security, France; General Directorate for Internal Security, France; General Directorate of General Security, Lebanon; National Directorate of Security, Afghanistan; Directorate of General Security, Iraq
As the mission of protecting VIPs is very delicate, sensitive and complex, DGSN command has always insisted that SPS members be over-trained: the operational level is always maintained at the highest level thanks to the specialized training regularly organized in order to comply with international norms and standards in the field of close guarding.
In 2008, a fully-electronic identification system (CNIe) was introduced with an automated fingerprint system in a partnership between the DGSN and the French Thales Group. [8] [7] The CNIe was a smart card with a barcode and RFID support. [14] [8] In 2020, a new CNIe system was implemented in a partnership between the DGSN, the ADD and IDEMIA. [15]