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The South Sudan National Police Service (SSNPS) completed the tenth sensitization workshop on the operational delivery of the Confidence and Trust Building Policing Strategy (CTBPS). The course was supported by UNMISS Police, Human Rights Department and Child Protection Units.
CTBPS was developed by the former SSNPS IGP (Inspector General of Police) Pieng Deng Kuol following the crisis of December 2013, to provide a conceptual framework for rebuilding confidence and trust between the SSNPS and the people of South Sudan. It is in the main but not exclusively aimed at those IDPs sheltering at the UNMISS Protection-of-Civilians (PoC) sites. The strategy also aims to create an improved security environment that makes it possible for the safe return of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) to their former areas of residence
To contribute to the strategy, UNMISS Police assist in sensitizing SSNPS officers in key areas, mainly Human Rights, International Humanitarian Law, Community Policing and Sexual and Gender based Violence, and support the SSNPS Emergency Call Centre (ECC) and quick response team known as “777”. UNPOL also participates in the coordination of the Police Development Committee and supports the UNDP ID card project by providing IT experts to operate the SSNPS Personnel Database.
In support of the SSNPS CTBPS, three police posts, located in Khor William and Gudele areas, were built using funding from UNMISS Quick Impact Projects (QIP). These areas have been identified under the strategy as being areas where IDPs originally fled their homes.
During two-week workshop, thirty-four specially selected officers participated in lectures and practical activities aimed at providing course delegates with skills and knowledge on how win back the trust of the public and increase the security of the communities.
Between January and April this year, the SSNPS have trained three hundred officers in seven sessions, while 104 officers underwent similar training in May-June 2015. The course participants will be performing their duties in Khor William and Gudele areas.
“We are here to support you, we are here to make things chance, we are here to see you changing,” said the UNPOL Chief of Operations, Mr. Emmanuel Butera, addressing the participants during the closing ceremony and assured them that UNMISS would continue support and facilitate such courses.
“Go out there and chance the environment, go out there and serve the people (of South Sudan), go out there and be trusted by your communities and be confident in whatever you are doing,” he continued.
Mr. Butera also urged the course delegates to immediately implement in practice the knowledge gained during the training, “What you have captured here should be useful not only to you but to the people you are serving.”
“When you are putting this uniform on, the communities should look at you as at the problem solvers. You should always be loyal to your leadership, to your nation, to your people,” he finished his speech.
“As we all know, we are still a new country. We need our friends so that we can all go together to give good services to the people who are in need,” said the Assistant IGP for General Directorate of Training, Lieutenant General Joseph Lado and thanked UNMISS for the continued support.
Mr. Lado also touched upon the selection of the candidates and stressed the significance of the fact that female police officers were very well represented and made up almost half of the participants.
“I urge you to start making the change in our police work, you have already got the necessary knowledge for that. We (the SSNPS leadership) want you to make use of this knowledge for the benefit of people of South Sudan,” he added.
Cadets from 8th Regiment, Advanced Camp, complete the Confidence Course on Fort Knox, Ky., July 10, 2024. The Confidence Course consists of ten obstacles that are designed to physically and mentally challenge Cadets. | Photo by Nate Gardner, Ohio University
Confidence B187BLG (69) is a Leyland Olympian with ECW bodywork. Seen during an enthusiasts tour, B187BLG was new to Crosville as their DOG187.
From a placard on the site:
" Erected in 1860, this part of City Hall housed the Confidence Engine Company which was originally formed as The Mountaineer Engine Company. When flames engulfed most of the town in 1856, concerned citizens of Placerville realized that even the best organized fire company would be lost fighting another major conflagration without a fire engine. In 1857, the group of volunteers solicited the funds to purchase a used engine and 250 feet of fire hose from Sacramento’s Engine Company No.1. Finding it impossible to remove the deeply ingraved title “Confidence Engine No.1” from the newly acquired engine, the company decided to adopt the name.
Atop the building, Confidence Engine Company raised a wooden copula that it used to drain its leather fire hoses. A large wooden building adjoined in the rear and served as the site for some of the county’s earliest fairs. The hall also hosted the company’s annual New Year’s Ball, as well as concerts, plays and other civic events until fire consumed it in 1910. Many times in the history of the Confidence Engine Company, the second floor of the brick building also served as a dance Hall. From 1902 until 2004, Placerville City Government occupied the old firehouse."
The South Sudan National Police Service (SSNPS) completed the tenth sensitization workshop on the operational delivery of the Confidence and Trust Building Policing Strategy (CTBPS). The course was supported by UNMISS Police, Human Rights Department and Child Protection Units.
CTBPS was developed by the former SSNPS IGP (Inspector General of Police) Pieng Deng Kuol following the crisis of December 2013, to provide a conceptual framework for rebuilding confidence and trust between the SSNPS and the people of South Sudan. It is in the main but not exclusively aimed at those IDPs sheltering at the UNMISS Protection-of-Civilians (PoC) sites. The strategy also aims to create an improved security environment that makes it possible for the safe return of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) to their former areas of residence
To contribute to the strategy, UNMISS Police assist in sensitizing SSNPS officers in key areas, mainly Human Rights, International Humanitarian Law, Community Policing and Sexual and Gender based Violence, and support the SSNPS Emergency Call Centre (ECC) and quick response team known as “777”. UNPOL also participates in the coordination of the Police Development Committee and supports the UNDP ID card project by providing IT experts to operate the SSNPS Personnel Database.
In support of the SSNPS CTBPS, three police posts, located in Khor William and Gudele areas, were built using funding from UNMISS Quick Impact Projects (QIP). These areas have been identified under the strategy as being areas where IDPs originally fled their homes.
During two-week workshop, thirty-four specially selected officers participated in lectures and practical activities aimed at providing course delegates with skills and knowledge on how win back the trust of the public and increase the security of the communities.
Between January and April this year, the SSNPS have trained three hundred officers in seven sessions, while 104 officers underwent similar training in May-June 2015. The course participants will be performing their duties in Khor William and Gudele areas.
“We are here to support you, we are here to make things chance, we are here to see you changing,” said the UNPOL Chief of Operations, Mr. Emmanuel Butera, addressing the participants during the closing ceremony and assured them that UNMISS would continue support and facilitate such courses.
“Go out there and chance the environment, go out there and serve the people (of South Sudan), go out there and be trusted by your communities and be confident in whatever you are doing,” he continued.
Mr. Butera also urged the course delegates to immediately implement in practice the knowledge gained during the training, “What you have captured here should be useful not only to you but to the people you are serving.”
“When you are putting this uniform on, the communities should look at you as at the problem solvers. You should always be loyal to your leadership, to your nation, to your people,” he finished his speech.
“As we all know, we are still a new country. We need our friends so that we can all go together to give good services to the people who are in need,” said the Assistant IGP for General Directorate of Training, Lieutenant General Joseph Lado and thanked UNMISS for the continued support.
Mr. Lado also touched upon the selection of the candidates and stressed the significance of the fact that female police officers were very well represented and made up almost half of the participants.
“I urge you to start making the change in our police work, you have already got the necessary knowledge for that. We (the SSNPS leadership) want you to make use of this knowledge for the benefit of people of South Sudan,” he added.
Women who learned to run their own gardens and market their surplus grew in confidence, and many became leaders in their communities. Tsion, pictured here, is a case in point.
I had a feeling trying out a heavy, but grippy downhill tire would be a good boost for Haley's confidence on the roots and rocks of the North Shore. As you can see here, it worked! Blasting through the air with style and good form, and coming through for the high fives. Great work today, Haley!
International Debate Education Association South Eastern Europe (IDEA SEE) considers art and design to be important tools for communicating messages. Therefore we are organizing a series of workshops where youth and NGOs will learn how to use art and design to tell their stories to communicate their messages to society.
The goal is to support and guide young leaders as they develop skills in advocacy through art and design and to build their confidence to lead effective change in their communities.
This workshop was held in Jastrebac, Serbia, 1-5 October 2014.
An Edwardian enamelled metal advertisement outside the Co-operative grocery store in Beamish Museum proclaims that the makers of "Sunlight" soap will give £1,000 (about £70,000 in today's money) to anyone who can prove that the soap "...contains any form of adulteration whatsoever or contains any injurious chemicals". They must have been very confident!
Copyright © 2009 Terry Pinnegar Photography. All Rights Reserved. THIS IMAGE IS NOT TO BE USED WITHOUT MY EXPRESS PERMISSION!
My after forty face felt far more comfortable than anything I lived with previously. Self-confidence was a powerful beauty-potion; I looked better because I felt better. Failure and grief as well as success and love had served me well. Finally, I was tapping into that most hard-won of youth dews: wisdom.
- Nancy Collins
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Looking for the best summer day camp? What to ensure that you child has a
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