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The Labour Market Regulatory Authority (LMRA) is a government body in Bahrain with a corporate identity endowed with full financial and administrative independence under the authority of a board of directors chaired by the Minister of Labour. The Authority was established on 31 May 2006 to regulate and control work permits for foreign workers ...
The Bahrain Police Directorate was first established in 1961 to address internal security, and was headed by Shaikh Mohammed ibn Salman Al Khalifa.At the time of Bahrain's independence from Britain in 1971, the name of the Directorate was changed to the Ministry of Interior, and the State Police was renamed as Public Security Forces.
Royal Academy of Police; General Directorate of Traffic (which serves a similar function to the Spanish counterpart with the same name, run, like the Bahraini General Directorate of Traffic, by that country's Interior Ministry) Customs Affairs Directorate; Financial Intelligence Directorate; Public Relations Directorate Police Media Center
The SSFC has been at the frontline of the Bahrain government's crackdown on pro-democracy protesters during the 2011 Bahraini uprising in the Arab Spring. [ 1 ] In November 2007, Bahrain signed a cooperation agreement with France under which French police officers working in the Compagnies Républicaines de Sécurité have provided training to ...
The NSA director is appointed by the King, has cabinet rank, and is a member of the Supreme Defence Council along with the Minister of Interior. [1] According to the BCHR and opposition, senior positions of the NSA are occupied by relatives of the King, the majority of the agency's employees are non-Bahraini citizens and, despite being a majority of Bahrain's population, Shi'ites make up only ...
Represented His Royal Highness Prince Khalifa Bin Salman Al Khalifa, Bahrain Prime Minister in the United Nations Security Council's Conference on Human Trafficking, New York (December 20, 2016). Represents the Kingdom of Bahrain in the annual conferences of the ILO, the Arab Labour Organization (ALO), and a number of other related Arab and ...
Bahraini police. There is a low rate of crime in Bahrain. [1] Incidents of petty crime such as pickpocketing and bag snatching are reported especially in the old market areas . [2] Incidents of violent crime are uncommon, [1] but increasing. Though small in size, there is a growing underground drug market in the country. [3]
Meanwhile, Bahrain's new chief of police said that the Community Police force, established in 2005, [2] would recruit 500 new officers "from all sections of Bahrain society." [1] Bahrain's Community Police officers only patrol the areas they are recruited from, and do not carry weapons, [3] although they have arrest powers. [2]