Center of Excellence for Stability Police Units

The Center of Excellence for Stability Police Units is a training center and a doctrinal hub created by the Italian government on 1 March 2005, in accordance with the G8 Action Plan “Expanding Global Capability for Peace Support Operations” (PSOs). This initiative is based on the international expertise developed by the Carabinieri, having served in several peace-keeping missions in the last three decades.

Logo CoESPU

Targets

The CoESPU targets are:

  • to operate training programs, including “train the trainer” courses and “Mobile Assistance Teams” (MATs)
  • to promote interoperability principles, also providing interoperability training with the military forces and other components;
  • to develop common doctrine and operational procedures;
  • to be active part of the doctrinal network worldwide, interacting with International Organizations, academic institutes and research centers in the relevant areas

The Center is open to all those countries, particularly the African ones, interested in establishing their own Stability Police Units (SPUs), and employ those units in PSOs under the UN or other international organizations.

Doctrinal Hub

Working as a “doctrinal hub”, the aim of the Center is to develop doctrine and common operational procedures for the employment of Stability Police Units in PSOs. Multinational linkages have been established with the most active institution in the peacekeeping area, such as the United States Institute of Peace (USIP), the Pearson Peacekeeping Centre, the Defense Institute for International Legal Studies, and the US Peacekeeping Support Operation Institute.

Moreover, the Center is the “facilitator” of the Stability Police Units area in the newly created internet portal “INPROL” (International Network to Promote the Rule of Law).

International seminars and workshops have been organized to spread and share the acquired knowledge with other bodies, first of all with the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations. Two “UN Formed Police Units Command Development seminars”, sponsored by DPKO have been hosted at CoESPU, with the participation of UN Police Commissioners, FPU Commanders, FPU Coordinators from several UN Missions, along with members of NATO, EU, Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, United States Institute of Peace (USIP) and other organizations.

Training center

Course's snapshot

The Center offers two different levels of courses, one for senior officers and one for middle-ranked personnel. The main purpose is to prepare the attendees to establish Stability Police Units once back in their home countries.

  • high level/staff officers

Participants: 40 Senior Officers (Major - Colonel/or equivalent civilian) Duration: 5 weeks; Frequency: 4 per year.

  • Middle management

Participants: 100 Junior Officers/non-commissioned officers (platoon/ssquad leaders, Staff Sergeants/or civilian equivalent) Duration: 7 weeks Frequency: 5 per year. All the participants should have good police skills.

The following are the main topics of the courses:

  • International and Humanitarian Law
  • Peace Support Operations
  • SPU planning and organization
  • Rules of Engagement
  • Force Protection
  • SPU tactical employment
  • Operational planning and procedures
  • Police techniques in hostile environment

Where

CoESPU's plate

The “Chinotto” compound, located in Vicenza, Italy, approx. 70 km (43 mi) from Venice.

The facilities, recently refurbished, include:

  • board and lodging for 300 people;
  • teaching rooms with hi-tech equipment;
  • multimedia and internet rooms;
  • an indoor shooting range;
  • a gym;
  • external training areas;
  • a library;
  • general services (barber, laundry, ATM, etc.)

Participants

Flag-raising ceremony

Have agreed to the project, and have been sending their personnel to train, the following governments:

Contributions

Besides United States and Italy, give their contribution at "CoESPU" project, sending highly qualified staff instructors the following countries:

gollark: But... Google is hiring some of the smartest programmers around, can they *not* make a language which is not this, well, stupid? Dumbed-down?
gollark: It has some very nice things for the cloud-thing/CLI tool/server usecase; the runtime is pretty good and for all garbage collection's flaws manual memory management is annoying, and the standard library is pretty extensive.
gollark: I'm not entirely sure what the aim is - maybe they originally wanted to go for highly concurrent systems or something, but nowadays it seems to mostly be used in trendy cloudy things, servers, command line utilities, that sort of thing.
gollark: I think my use cases are nice usecases, and I think it has flaws even in the domains it seems to be targeted at.
gollark: I think it should at least not, essentially, deliberately cripple itself at some classes of thing.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.