Recommendations on Policing in Multi-Ethnic Societies
IV. ENGAGING WITH ETHNIC COMMUNITIES
12. Police should be tasked with developing methods and practices to communicate
and co-operate with minorities and to build confidence together at local, regional
and national levels.
13. Police will need to ensure they have the capability to communicate with
minorities in minority languages, wherever possible by recruitment and training
of multilingual staff, and also by use of qualified interpreters.
14. Police should play a proactive role in providing encouragement and support to
minorities to assist them to communicate and co-operate with the police, for
example by acting as partners in initiatives to promote recruitment and to
provide training on minority issues. Minorities for their part should be ready to
communicate and co-operate with the police for the purpose of increasing
community safety and access to justice.
15. It is recommended that mechanisms are established to ensure that police are
democratically accountable for their actions to people from all sections of the
community. These need to include effective systems for making and following up
complaints, which are accessible to persons belonging to national minorities. All
sections of the community need to be aware of their rights and responsibilities in
relation to the police, and of the powers of the police and the services they are
expected to provide.
V. OPERATIONAL PRACTICES
16. Measures should be taken to ensure that police enforce the law in an impartial
and non-discriminatory manner which does not single out any particular group,
e.g. by engaging in 'racial profiling'. Such measures should include codes for the
conduct of operational practices, such as use of police powers to stop and search
people on the street and in other public places.
17. Police should take steps to encourage the reporting by persons belonging to
national minorities of crime, in order to promote community safety and access to
justice.
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