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On a visit to the sprawling city a few weeks ago, Afghan President Hamid Karzai acknowledged corruption as spoke to several hundred leaders from the province in a steamy hall. He recounted a story of an Afghan National Police officer in Kandahar who used profanity and insulted a local religious cleric. "If we have such people in the police ranks we will not be able to bring security," Karzai said. "If a police officer does not respect a cleric in his house, how will it be possible for the police to respect people in the society? We don't need such police." The newly trained ANCOPS are not only tasked with providing better security in the city, but it's hoped that their professionalism will help change the perception of the Afghan National Police in the eyes of a skeptical public. "We want the population to see their ANCOP out serving them, providing stability so that people can go out to the market, to school and Kandahar can have a bustling economy that it should have," said Brig. Gen. Anne Macdonald, deputy to NATO's commanding general for police development in Afghanistan. "Right now, the police in Kandahar, unfortunately, have a reputation of being corrupt
-- certainly not all, but some." As the uniformed police enter their training programs, biometrics information will be obtained from them and they will be drug-tested, Macdonald said. "If they test positive for opiates, methphetamines or other hard drugs, they will be immediately let go," she said. Evidence of marijuana use will be overlooked in the beginning, but they will be retested later to make sure they are not still using the drug, she said. Residents this week got their first look at ANCOPS like Mohammad Toryalai, who was patting down the driver of a car and inspecting what turned out to be empty plastic jugs in the trunk. "We are having our guards search every vehicle," Toryalai said at the checkpoint he was working on the northwest side of the city. At a different checkpoint, another ANCOP, Mohammad Jawaid, patted down a man still astride his motorbike and inspected a three-wheeled rickshaw, decorated with colorful Pakistani artwork. "We are trying to do our part," Jawaid said. "And I hope more policemen like us come out to help us bring peace in our country." it."
[Associated
Press;
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