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This book traces the evolution of the Palestinian police and security forces, beginning with its historical antecedents in Lebanon and the occupied territories, and the formation of formal police organizations after the Oslo Accords until the outbreak of the second Intifada in September 2000. The history of the Palestinian Police revolves around the fundamental question of how a national police force can be created and operated without the framework of an independent state. Apart from offering a far more detailed and accurate account of the Palestinian Police history than previous works, the study also provides unique insight into the problems and dilemmas of policing by non-state actors in war torn societies. The study traces the establishment and expansion of the Palestinian police and security forces with a focus on PLO efforts at recruiting, training and expanding the force, its political context, institutional development, and dilemmas of 'non-state' policing in the context of the political-military conflict with Israel. Based on a host of new unpublished sources, spanning from Palestinian Authority documents, internal Palestinian Police publications, a unique access to the archives of the Norwegian Foreign Ministry (which chaired the most important police coordination committees), and a very thorough review of thousands of Arab, Israeli and international press, the present study gives a unique insight into a hitherto uncharted territory in contemporary Palestinian and Middle Eastern history. This book will also be of invaluable interest to students, researchers and practitioners in the field of security sector reform and international police assistance.
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A Police Force
without a
State
A History of the Palestinian Security Forces in the West Bank and Gaza
BRYNJAR LIA
A POLICE FORCE WITHOUT A STATE
A History of the Palestinian Security Forces in the West Bank and Gaza
Published by
Garnet Publishing Limited
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Ithaca Press is an imprint of Garnet Publishing Limited
Copyright © Brynjar Lia, 2006
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
First Edition
ISBN: 978-0-86372-463-3
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Jacket design by David Rose
Typeset by Samantha Barden
Printed by Biddles, UK
In memory of my father Olav Lia
————
List of Tables
List of Boxes
Glossary
Notes on Transliteration and Terms
Foreword and Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
PART I THE PLO
——
2 Guarding the Revolution: Palestinian Self-Policing and Vigilantism before Oslo
3 The Road to Oslo and its Palestinian Police Formula
4 “The Hawks are the Real Palestinian Police”: The Inside PLO's Police Preparations
5 Arab Brothers: The Politics of Police Training and Recruitment in Exile
6 Symbols of Liberation: The Politics of Palestinian Police Deployment
PART II POLICING PALESTINE
——
7 The Post-Oslo Order and Implications for Palestinian Policing
8 A Multitude of Security Forces, Agencies and Branches
9 In the Midst of Informers, Avengers and Death Squads
10 Illegal Weapons, Paramilitary Groups and Terrorists
11 Conclusion
Appendices
Bibliography and Sources
Index
————
2.1 Collaborator Killings in the Gaza Strip, 1987–93
5.1 Deployment of the Palestine Liberation Army, November 1993
8.1 The Palestinian Police: Legal and Semi-legal Units, 1994–7
————
2.1 Basic Forms of Paramilitary Punishment during the Intifada
5.1 PLO Working Document on the Palestinian Police Force, November 1993
7.1 The Palestinian–Israeli Agreements, 1993–9
————
AFPAgence France PresseAHLCThe Ad Hoc Liaison Committee, the main policy-making coordinating committee for international aid to the Palestinians, established in November 1993AIAmnesty InternationalAPAssociated PressBlack PanthersParamilitary resistance organization, primarily in the northern West Bank (Jenin, Nablus), linked to FatahB'TselemThe Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied TerritoriesCIA(The US) Central Intelligence AgencyCOPPThe Coordinating Committee for International Assistance to the Palestinian Police ForceCPRSThe Center for Palestine Research and Studies, NablusDCODistrict (Security) Coordination (and Liaison) OfficeDFLPThe Democratic Front for the Liberation of PalestineDoPThe Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements for the West Bank and Gaza Strip (known generally as the Oslo Accords)DPADeutsche Presse-AgenturFafoThe Institute for Applied Social Science, OsloFatahThe Palestine National Liberation Movement (harakat al-tahrir al-wataniyyah al-filastiniyyah)Fatah HawksA paramilitary resistance organization, primarily in Gaza, linked to FatahFBIUS Federal Bureau of InvestigationFFIThe Norwegian Defense Research Establishment (Forsvarets forskningsinstitutt)FIDAThe Palestinian Democratic UnionForce-17The Palestinian security agency with primary responsibility for Chairman Arafat's securityGIS(The Palestinian) General Intelligence Service (al-mukhabarat al-‘ammah)GSSGeneral Security Service (the Israeli internal intelligence agency), also known as Shin Beth or ShabakGush Emunim(Lit. ‘The Bloc of the Faithful’) Israeli religious-nationalist settler movement which has spearheaded new settlement establishments in the Occupied Territories since the 1970sHamasThe Islamic Resistance Movement (in Palestine)HRWHuman Rights WatchIBA TV-AIsrael Broadcasting Authority TV (Jerusalem, in Arabic), via SWBIBA TV-HIsrael Broadcasting Authority TV (Jerusalem, in Hebrew), via SWBICITAPUS International Criminal Investigation Training Assistance ProgramIDFThe Israeli Defense ForcesIDF RadioIsraeli Defense Forces Radio (Tel Aviv, in Hebrew), via SWBIMRAIndependent Media Review and Analysis, Aaron Lerner, Israeli right-wing media sourceIPCRIIsrael/Palestine Centre for Research and Information, JerusalemIPR-SBIDIPR Strategic Business Information Database, via Lexis-NexisIPSInter-Press ServiceIsrTV 1Israel TV Channel 1 (Jerusalem, in Arabic or Hebrew), via SWBIsrTV 2Israel TV Channel 2 (Jerusalem, in Hebrew), via SWBIsrTV 3Israel TV Channel 3 (Jerusalem, in Hebrew), via SWBJCSSThe Jaffa Center for Strategic StudiesJDJordanian dinar, the currency used in the Occupied TerritoriesJMCCThe Jerusalem Media and Communication Center, Shaykh Jarrah, East JerusalemJSC(The Palestinian–Israeli) Joint Security Coordination CommitteeLACCThe Local Aid Coordination CommitteeLAWThe Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights and the EnvironmentMECSMiddle East Contemporary SurveyMEEDMiddle East Economic DigestMENAThe Middle East News Agency, CairoMFAMinistry of Foreign Affairs, (if not specified, it signifies the Norwegian MFA)MOUMemorandum of understandingNGONon-governmental organizationNISNew Israeli shekel, the Israeli currencyPA/PNAThe Palestinian Authority or The Palestinian National AuthorityPASCPalestine Armed Struggle Command (qiyadat-al-kifah al-musallah), the PLO's police in the refugee camps in LebanonPFLPThe Popular Front for the Liberation of PalestinePFLP-GCThe Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General CommandPHRICThe Palestinian Human Rights Information CenterPHRMGThe Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring GroupPIJ(Palestinian) Islamic JihadPLAThe Palestine Liberation ArmyPLOThe Palestine Liberation Organization (munazzamat al-tahrir al-filastiniyyah)PNCThe Palestine National CouncilPNSFThe Palestinian National Security Forces (quwwat al-amn al-wataniyyah), the largest paramilitary police branch, corresponding roughly to the Public Security in the Oslo AccordsPPFThe Palestinian Police Force or the Palestinian Directorate for Public Security and Police (mudiriyyat al-amn al-‘amm wa'l-shurtah)PPPThe Palestine People's PartyPSA(The Palestinian) Preventive Security Agency (jihaz al-amn al-wiqa'i), sometimes called the Preventive Security Service (PSS, PPSS) or the Preventive Security Force (PSF)PS/Force-17Presidential Security/Force-17 (amn al-ri'asah)al-QassamThe ‘Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas's military wingRed EaglesThe paramilitary resistance organization, linked to PFLPRLebRadio Lebanon (Beirut, in Arabic), via SWB.RMCRadio Monte Carlo (Middle East, Paris, in Arabic), via SWBSCNSThe Supreme Council for National SecuritySSCThe State Security Court, established by the PNA in February 1995SWBBBC Summary of World BroadcastsSWGThe Sectoral Working GroupSWG/PPFThe Sectoral Working Group for PoliceTIPThe Temporary International Presence (for Gaza and Jericho)TIPHThe Temporary International Presence in the City of HebronUDThe Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Utenriksdepartementet)UD-RGThe Norwegian Representative's Office in GazaUD-TEThe Royal Norwegian Embassy in Tel AvivUD/TIP-filesSelected MFA correspondence on the TIP-negotiations, 1994–5UNCThe Unified National Command of the Uprising, a PLO-led body directing the intifada from 1988 onwardsUNDPKOThe United Nations Department of Peacekeeping OperationsUNRWAThe United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian RefugeesUNRWA/PPF-filesUNRWA correspondence and internal memos on donor payment of salaries for the Palestinian Police, 1994–5UNSCOThe Office of the United Nations Special Coordinator in the Occupied TerritoriesUPIUnited Press InternationalVOIVoice of Israel Radio (Jerusalem, in Hebrew), via SWBVOI-AVoice of Israel Radio (Jerusalem, in Arabic), via SWBVOI-EVoice of Israel Radio (Jerusalem, in English), via SWBVOI-ExVoice of Israel Radio, external service (Jerusalem, in English), via SWBVOLVoice of Lebanon Radio (Beirut, in Arabic), via SWBVOP-AVoice of Palestine Radio (Algiers, in Arabic), via SWBVOP-JVoice of Palestine Radio (Jericho, in Arabic), via SWBVOP-RVoice of Palestine Radio (Ramallah, in Arabic), via SWBVOP-YVoice of Palestine Radio (via Yemeni Republic Radio, San‘a’, in Arabic), via SWBXinhuaThe Xinhua News Agency————
With regard to the transcription of Arabic terms and names, I have made no distinction between emphatic and non-emphatic consonants; only ‘and’ have been used to indicate alif and ‘ayn. As I refer to many names that have no agreed English transcription, I have in general transcribed the names of people and the names of places according to how they are spelt in written Arabic. This means that a few names may not look familiar to all readers: for example, I have preferred Sari Nusaybah to Sari Nusseibeh and Sa'ib ‘Urayqat to Saeb Erikat. (I have admittedly deviated from this rule with regard to Yasir Arafat's name (not ‘Arafat) and to widely known geographical names.) Regarding the Norwegian letters æ, ø and å, I have chosen not to transcribe them when used in names. (My experience is that non-Norwegian readers mispronounce such names anyway.) On the other hand, English translations have been provided in footnote references to sources in Arabic and Norwegian.
When the text or footnotes refer to the MFA, the Cairo Embassy, the Tel Aviv Embassy, the Gaza Office etc., they should be understood as the Norwegian MFA, the Norwegian Embassy in Cairo, the Norwegian Representative's Office in Gaza etc.
A few terms require explanation. I have used the terms ‘police’ and ‘policing’ about activities which for many readers probably appear to be the exact opposite of the purpose of policing, namely fighting crime. The theoretical discussion in the Introduction will shed some light on the fascinating complexity of non-state policing and the blurred border between policing and dealing with crime in societies in conflict. I have used the term ‘paramilitary’ frequently, despite the fact that it is not commonly used in the Palestinian context. It has two meanings. First, as an adjective it refers to semi-military formations. Second, as a noun it refers in this study to members of groups or organizations that regard themselves as military formations, although they lack most of the formal attributes of an army. They are usually armed or have access to weapons, and view violence as a legitimate means of struggle. Although elsewhere, the term may refer to counter-guerrilla militias, no such connotation is intended here. In this study, the term ‘paramilitary’ or ‘paramilitaries’ is often synonymous with ‘street fighters’, ‘guerrilla’, ‘militant’ and ‘terrorist’ as broadly defined. The term ‘terrorist’ has generally been avoided, except for contexts where the terrorism discourse itself is relevant, for the simple reason that it involves too many judgements about the legitimacy of resistance, targeting strategies and distinctions between civil and military targets etc., which in many cases are difficult to determine empirically and clearly fall outside the scope of this study. Again, this usage does not imply that a paramilitary cannot be a terrorist, only that the former term seems more adequate for explaining Palestinian policing. For the same reason, the term ‘activist’ has been avoided except where it refers to persons with a predominantly political and non-violent (or non-military) involvement.
The ‘Palestinian Police’ (with upper-case initial letters) is used as a generic term to refer to all Palestinian police organizations – from the Civilian Police and the National Security Forces to the various intelligence and security agencies – operating as part of Palestinian self-rule, but it excludes exile-based security organizations such as the Palestine Armed Struggle Command (PASC) in Lebanon. When referring to the blue-uniformed Palestinian Police, I prefer the term ‘Civilian Police’ although the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) often only use the term ‘police’ (shurtah) for these units. I have referred to Palestinian ‘security forces’ in contexts where army-like formations such as the Public Security (or National Security) Forces are involved, and I use the term ‘intelligence’ or ‘security agencies’ or ‘security services’ where typically plainclothes units are involved, such as the Preventive Security and the General Intelligence.
I refer to the ‘Palestinian National Authority’ (PNA), not the PA, as is the common term in Palestinian–Israeli agreements, because the former term is how the PNA refers to itself. For the sake of simplicity, I use ‘the PLO’ until May 1994, when the PNA Council was formed, and ‘the PNA’ at later stages, although I fully acknowledge that these two bodies were interwoven and that decision-making on the PLO level affected the PNA and vice versa. I use the term ‘Fatah’ about the majority mainstream wing of the PLO, although other common terms exist in English, such as Fath, Fateh or al-Fatah.
————
I would like to thank Bjørn Olav Utvik at the University of Oslo for being my supervisor for the doctoral dissertation that became the basis for this book. Another person who deserves special mention is Annika S. Hansen, my colleague for many years, whose structured approach to security sector reform has been very helpful to me. Oren Barak, now at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, also deserves special thanks for inspiring me during my sabbatical at Harvard University. I would like to mention too Otwin Marenin at Washington State University, Rex Brynen at McGill University, Paul Lalor and Jane Margaret Chanaa then at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Gordon Peake at the International Peace Academy, Oxford University, Sara Roy and Lenore Martin at Harvard University, Lars Haugom at Oslo University, Bjørn Smørgrav and Police Major-General (ret.) Arnstein Øverkil at the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Nils Butenschøn at the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights, Hilde Henriksen Waage at the Peace Research Institute in Oslo, Beverley Milton-Edwards at Queen's University in Belfast, Richard Hooper, and Mark Taylor at the Fafo Institute for Applied International Studies in Oslo. They were all helpful with comments and constructive criticism at various stages of my research. I am also indebted to the librarians at the Harry S. Truman Research Institute in Jerusalem and at Orient House's library, especially Aron and Hani, who assisted me so generously during my research there in autumn 2000.
Many others deserve special consideration for having facilitated this research. Cemal Kafadar, Director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard, provided me with an excellent working environment by appointing me as Visiting Scholar there in 2001–2, where a large part of this study was written. The funding for the research was provided partly by the Fulbright Foundation for Educational Exchange and partly by my employer, the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment. I would also like to thank the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs for allowing me access to its archives. Finally, my numerous interviewees and informants, many of whom cannot be named for various reasons, deserve my sincere thanks for their time, insights and knowledge which they shared with me in the course of my research. All errors and flaws in this work are of course my responsibility alone.
I have dedicated this study to my father Olav Lia, who died from cancer when this study was near completion and without whose encouragement and inspiration this and earlier studies would not have been written.
Brynjar Lia
————
When the Palestine Liberation Organization and the State of Israel signed the Declaration of Principles (DOP), known more generally as the Oslo Accords, on the White House lawn on 13 September 1993, a process was set in motion that led to the formation of a Palestinian self-government authority and a number of Palestinian state-like institutions in the West Bank and Gaza. The largest of these were the Palestinian police and security organizations.
Despite the considerable academic literature on Palestinian–Israeli relations and the Palestinian self-rule experiment, little has been published so far on the Palestinian police and security agencies (hereafter ‘the Palestinian Police’ or ‘the Police’).1 This is rather surprising given the relevance of the Palestinian case in understanding the role of the police in war-to-peace transitions. Also, the remarkable evolution of the Palestinian Police from its embryonic stage in 1992–3 to a force of 40,000 men four years later with jurisdiction over most of the Palestinian West Bank and Gaza population is an important part of contemporary Palestinian and Middle Eastern history. The paucity of academic studies on the Palestinian Police has a parallel in the dearth of studies on Third World policing, reflecting the tendency of police studies to concentrate on Western societies.2
In writing a history of the Palestinian Police, it seems natural to concentrate on the establishment phase, when the process of transformation and change was at its peak. Although this study traces the evolution of various Palestinian police institutions from the outbreak of the first intifada in 1987 through the Oslo peace process to the beginning of the al-Aqsa Intifada in late September 2000, it is the formative period from 1992 to 1996 that receives the most attention. This begins with the Palestine Liberation Organization's (PLO) police preparations during the Madrid peace talks and ends with the Police’ deployment to most West Bank cities and the Palestinian elections, which closed the first phase of Palestinian self-rule.
An underlying theoretical issue in this book is how a police force is created without the framework of a state. Inspired by the theoretical literature reviewed in here the Introduction, this work attempts to address a fundamental question about policing and insurgent movements. How do insurgent groups, when transforming into state-like entities, shape their police organizations? To what degree were the Palestinian Police's institutions and performance coloured by the fact that its organizations were created by a national liberation movement in the wake of a violent conflict (the intifada). How did the Palestinian Police adapt to the fact that it was part of a non-state entity still under territorial dispute and facing a militarily superior hegemonic power? What were the Palestinian leadership's demands, priorities and constraints in relation to the formation of the new police forces?
At the time of the Oslo Accords, the PLO had long been a well-established national liberation organization with a history of informal policing in Palestinian refugee camps and with extensive experience of protecting PLO fighters, personalities and institutions worldwide. Therefore, the PLO was not a tabula rasa in the realm of policing; it possessed certain policing cultures. However, its emphasis on armed struggle, the protection of the PLO leadership and the prevention of infiltration and collaboration represented a typical insurgent policing model whereby the security needs of the resistance fighters, rather than services to the community were given priority. How did this policing legacy impact on the new police force? To what degree was the insurgent policing model adopted as the basis for the new police force? Did the PLO's preparatory efforts in 1993–4, for example its recruitment policies, strengthen or weaken the continuity between the intifada and the post-Oslo period in terms of policing?
The new political order created after the signing of the Oslo Accords was another major factor that affected Palestinian policing. As the occupying and colonial3 power in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israel viewed the Palestinian Police through the prism of its territorial interests in the Occupied Territories and the omnipresent threat of terrorism. The dominance of Israel over the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) in nearly every area of life made its preferences and policies a major determinant of the evolution of the Palestinian Police. This created a fundamental anomaly in Palestinian policing, as the Palestinian Police's main duty, according to the signed agreements, was the protection of
Israeli security and colonial interests in the Occupied Territories. How did this anomaly affect the Palestinian Police? How did the Police strike a balance between meeting popular expectations that it both confront the Israeli occupation and defend the Palestinian homeland but also abide by the Accords?
Policing by a non-state actor in a war-torn society is not unique to the Palestinian case, and I shall briefly review some of the recent literature devoted to this topic. Although not presuming to develop a general theory, this review will provide a broad background for understanding the Palestinian policing process and will allow us to identify its main themes and dilemmas in more detail.
The creation of police forces in the wake of a national liberation struggle and under conditions of limited self-rule, not full state independence, forces us to rethink the concepts of the police and policing. When the formation of a police force precedes the establishment of a state, it turns our traditional thinking about police–state relations upside down.4 This necessitates more theoretical groundwork than is usually required in traditional historiography. In the following, I shall discuss briefly the concepts and definitions of the police and policing in relation to politics and the state while attaching particular importance to policing by actors other than the public state police, especially policing by insurgent groups.
The relationships between a police force and the state, on the one hand, and the police and society, on the other, are complex and inherently difficult to define. One important factor is the police's function as the state and the government's face vis-à-vis the public.5 This is especially so in periods of great social change, when the police often play a more autonomous role as an actor in shaping the social and political order.
The ‘police’ have been defined as “people authorised by a group to regulate interpersonal relations within the group through the application of physical force”, a definition that focuses on three fundamental aspects of the concept of the police.6 Policing is best described as “a persistent effort by (somewhat) specialized personnel to reconstruct order in preferred forms of social arrangements, often by coercive means”.7
There are four core elements in this definition:
(a) Structure. Policing requires separateness as a social institution and some continuity as a social practice.
(b) Specialization. Policing is a specialized type of job whose specific structure and functions are defined for and by each society.
(c) Coercion. The most distinct characteristic of policing is the delegated authority to use force, but what constitutes legitimate coercion fluctuates with social norms and the political setting.
(d) Social goals and collective authorization. Policing is work done in pursuit of certain stated socially accepted ends and values. These social goals may vary but “their promotion is policing only when sanctioned by its relevant society”.8
These core characteristics constitute policing, and a specific arrangement of them may be called a ‘model of policing’. Different societies adopt different models of policing, shaped by a number of factors. David Bayley has identified four factors on elements: “sources of legitimacy, complexities of organisation, multiplicity of functions and societal consequences or outcomes of policing”.9 On the basis of comparative studies of policing patterns in different countries, there are now a considerable number of typologies of policing. One typology, for example, distinguishes between various forms of primitive and modern policing. The Anglo-American, Continental, colonial and the pervasive/comprehensive models (Japan, Cuba and China) are different forms of modern policing.10
Although these definitions and models may be satisfactory in a modern market democracy, there are clearly forms of policing which do not easily fit into any of them. In societies emerging from violent conflict, there is usually a mix of formal state-orientated and informal insurgent-based policing. The latter will usually have ill-defined missions, a secretive and fluid organization and weak legitimacy/‘collective authorization’. Insurgent-based policing will be dealt with in more detail below.
Since the establishment in London in 1829 of the Metropolitan Police, widely considered to be the first modern police force in history, policing styles have changed as a result of societal and political changes.11 The twentieth century witnessed the emergence of technologically driven policing and the more recent ‘post-modern’ police, with its heavy emphasis on image management and community policing. Political, economic and social developments have had a critical impact on police institutions and practices, but one duty appears to have remained constant throughout the history of policing: “to maintain the social order”.12
The involvement of the police in politics is often associated with autocratic forms of government. By contrast, the ideal police model in liberal democracies is that of apolitical or disinterested custodians of public order and the rule of law. But, as Brewer has observed, the police “occupy a strategic role in the regulation of political conflict”.13 He distinguishes between two main perspectives on policing: a liberal model that derives from a liberal view of the state, and emphasizes policing by consent; it is based on broadly agreed values and the neutral and equal application of rules. The second perspective is the radical view, which argues that the police act primarily as an instrument of coercion. The state is intrusive and expansive, functioning as a bastion whose primary purpose is to defend the interests of the powerful. In this context, the police serve as partisan enforcers of minority needs as well as agents of political control.
Within this typology, the police, in dealing with, for example, public disorder, can adopt a variety of political positions. The police can be mere ciphers and dutifully implement whatever strategy or combination of strategies the state has arrived at. They can be active and partisan supporters of the state against its opponents or autonomous agents working independently of the state either to undermine it as a whole or to advance a particular state elite competing for power. Although the police are a part of the state, “[they] are capable of relative independence from social forces and from state control as well. They are not simply unwittingly tools for the state but have a varying capacity for autonomous actions … Structural autonomy [of the police] tends to increase in a society that is fragmented into multiple and shifting power blocs.”14
Brewer et al. have identified a number of dimensions which define the police–politics relationship and which illustrate the continuum from weak to strong relationships between the police and politics. One of these dimensions is the way in which the conduct of the police affects people's perceptions of the state and specific state institutions and thus influences politics indirectly.15 In an attempt to improve the image of the state, the police may try, for example, to manufacture positive images by careful presentation of their conduct and to avoid negative images arising from incidents of police abuse. There are many examples of the police as agents of political change. The policies of civilianizing of the Royal Ulster Constabulary and opening up police membership to blacks in South Africa illustrate how, on occasion, police policy can be deliberately used to try to affect the state–society relationship. In general, legitimization processes are major linkages between the state and society. The police may affect these processes in autonomous and subtle ways, de-legitimizing as well as legitimizing the state and specific state policies by their behaviour and their manner and priorities in enforcing law and order.16
A key aspect of the state–police–politics complex is the state's strategy for dealing with public disorder. Irrespective of the political or ideological character of the state, most countries legislate for public disorder in similar ways. The main differences are the frequency with which emergency regulations are invoked and the legal procedures governing the use of police powers. The militarization of the police and the use of the armed forces in public order maintenance are common state strategies for dealing with public disorder. In many countries, the maintaining of public order has been militarized either permanently or for more limited periods. This process can take different forms. For example, the police may have been provided with military equipment, arms and training by the military, and their way of thinking about their mission may have been imbued with the military ethos of fighting ‘an enemy’. Or the police may be militarized in a second sense, in that they have strong links with the military, which directly aid them in their defence of public order. In post-conflict situations, the militarization of the police forces may also be the result of an influx of demobilized military officers into a newly established police core, resulting in a transplantation of the military ethos and military values and behavioural and organizational patterns into what is nominally a civilian police force.
The relationship between the police and politics becomes more complicated with the introduction of policing actors other than the state-centred public police, quite a common phenomenon in traditional societies outside the Western world. Findlay and Zvekic describe the policing styles of those societies as ranging along “a continuum from state-centred policing to community-based policing, each situated primarily in terms of its relationship with state bureaucracy”.17 Alternatives to state-centred policing may appear in a variety of ways and forms, and may co-exist or conflict with state-centred policing.
The issue of private policing has attracted the attention of academics in response to the proliferation of private protection services in recent decades. Sklansky warns against the societal and political consequences of such policing, which obviously affect the state's ability to guarantee all citizens, regardless of wealth, the equal protection provided by the law.18 The growth of private policing has taken place within a relatively well-established legal framework in the market democracies of the northern hemisphere; but this is less the case in the developing world, where the phenomenon of private policing is spreading. Latin America has seen a real explosion in private policing, basically because state policing is ineffective and because of the immense gap in wealth.
The rise of private policing has been both dramatic and socially disruptive in many transitional societies. In both post-communist Russia and the new South Africa, there was a great proliferation of private security agencies during the 1990s. Their rise assumed additional significance by their recruitment of former (and current) military, intelligence and secret police officers, as this may in certain cases blur the distinctions between state policing and private policing. The economic weakness of states undergoing major upheavals and societal transitions may unwittingly force a degree of privatization on to the police. Mark Galeotti noted in 1995 that Russia, which then had some 6,500 private security firms, had also failed to fully cover the operational budget of many state security services. To deal with the shortfall, these state security services had to rely on a share of any unpaid taxes they could retrieve, complemented by their own profit-making businesses.19 The Palestinian Police also faced the dilemma that underfinancing led to illegal revenuegathering via extortion and private protection services in the second half of the 1990s.
Stateless societies, such as Bedouin communities, are a particularly interesting subject in the study of self-policing. The considerable influence of tribal or clan allegiances in the West Bank and Gaza Strip makes them a relevant issue for this study.20 It may seem odd to extend the concept of policing to stateless Bedouin societies, which usually lack a separate public organization with a specialized function and delegated authority to use coercion. It remains true, nevertheless, that tribal societies systematically try to control violence and that cultural traditions and strategies are constantly mobilized by Bedouins to this end. In the absence of a legitimate state authority, violent ‘crimes’ are punished in accordance with detailed inherited tribal customs. These prescribe punishments ranging from ‘socially ritualized violence’, such as cutting off the culprit's braids, representing social death exacted in theatrical ritual form, to the more well-known vengeance killing or feuding, which constitutes a deterrent against resort to violence.21 Characteristically, Bedouin societies conceptualize crime within the framework of kinship organizations, where co-liability and tribal cohesion are the prime vehicles for enforcing (customary) justice. How acts of crime are dealt with depends on whether tribal group interests or individual interests are at stake. Interestingly, what modern states regard as a criminal offence or public delict, such as homicide and theft, is in Bedouin societies often regarded as a private delict in which society at large has no immediate interest. Conversely, honour crimes, such as harassment or disrespect of women or elders, which may not even be punishable under modern law, may be regarded as serious offences involving society at large.22
The progressive integration of Bedouins into their larger national societies has not eliminated the use of customary forms of justice. As Khalaf has observed in the case of Bedouins in Palestine/Israel, they have come to accept their incapacity to maintain the entire range of tribal customs for the settlement of violence, but they nevertheless “continue to view state court rulings and settlement in cases of homicide as partial or, better perhaps, as half-settlements”.23 Thus, the emerging picture of social change in present-day Bedouin societies is not only one of total transformation but also “one of an ongoing dialectic of continuity and change, an interplay between tradition and modernity”.24 As I shall discuss in Chapter 2, this phenomenon of co-existing and interacting systems of crime prevention and conflict resolution is particularly relevant for understanding the social context of Palestinian self-policing.
Vigilantism or self-policing by insurgent groups is an important but understudied form of policing.25 Such policing is of considerable interest to students of police reform in war-to-peace transitions, not least because peace settlements ending civil war often lead to the recruitment of rebel group members into police forces.
De la Roche has defined vigilantism as one of four distinct forms of non-governmental collective violence that are intended for social control and that define and respond to conduct as deviant. Vigilantism, like the three other forms (terrorism, lynching and rioting), is distinguished by a system of victims’ liability (individual or collective) and the participants’ (higher or lower) degree of organization. As opposed to lynching, which is basically spontaneous, unorganized and performed by a mob, vigilante practices are planned, organized and occur over time. In contrast to rioting and terrorism, whose victims are often randomly chosen, the victims of vigilantism are specifically selected on the basis of their individual liability.26 The terms ‘vigilantism’ and ‘self-policing’ are sometimes used interchangeably, although self-policing usually connotes “popular enterprises to which everyone can and should contribute” and vigilantism is usually associated with violence and usurpation of police authority by self-styled strongmen and local militias.27 Vigilantism has often been associated with establishment violence or state-sponsored or state-controlled paramilitarism designed to counter dissident movements, but the term has also been applied to insurgent groups.28
Self-policing and vigilantism by insurgent groups are at the end of Zvekic's continuum, where neither the policing actors nor the authority to police derive from or are condoned by the state. Self-policing emphasizes the activity of policing rather than the police as such. It may be a state-sponsored strategy to decentralize policing duties to local communities. Equally, it may be the strategy of an insurgent organization to encourage and force the population's disengagement from the incumbent regime and to supplant the authority of the state with its own. In the latter context, one may also talk of an ‘insurgent state’ or ‘guerrilla state’ entity in which the insurgents enjoy a degree of territorial control, offer services and protection to the population and command general obedience to such an extent that the incumbent regime's monopoly of legitimate violence has been lost. In some cases, only international recognition may stand in the way of such an entity becoming a state.
Vigilante policing may occur as a communal response to “the perceived shortfall in the maintenance of order in society”.29 It spreads wherever state authorities are undermined by inter-communal or ethnic conflict and where significant segments of the population are prevented from resorting to the police in order to resolve conflicts and deal with crime. The ethnic composition of the police forces, their policing style or both are key factors in the lack of trust in divided societies. Under such conditions, vigilantism by defenders of the state and self-help justice by insurgents (‘insurgent vigilantism’) may become dominant forms of policing.
Vigilantism is rooted in the traditions of popular justice in a number of countries. Fritz has demonstrated that perceptions of “popular sovereignty and vigilantism” were closely connected in nineteenth century America.30 He and others have shown that lawyers in the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century were more concerned with eliminating crime than observing due process, viewing “justice as a continuum with one end consisting of ‘due process legality’ and the other of ‘crime repression extralegality’ ”.31 Similarly, Sprinzak notes in his studies of settler vigilantism in the Israeli-occupied West Bank that the vigilantes do not necessarily perceive themselves in a state of principled conflict with the government or the prevailing concept of law, only with the alleged laxity in the government's enforcement of its laws. Vigilantism by insurgents is qualitatively different, however, as it is revolutionary and aims at replacing the existing state authorities with another state authority.
The vigilantism of the Republican paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland is an informative case study of this kind of policing. In his studies of paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland, Silke argues that vigilantism is a result of their efforts, first, to contain victimization among their own ranks and, second, to contain victimization among their communities.32Their vigilante campaigns served to consolidate their position of authority in the local communities after the ceasefire of 1994 because the end of armed struggle threatened to undermine their legitimacy and local standing.33 Paramilitary vigilantism is about much more than a simple response to crime. By developing an extensive and organized vigilante network, the insurgent paramilitary group increases its control over a local population, making it more difficult for other organizations to continue to exercise authority in the area. An accessible vigilante network provides a ready alternative to the public police, and the paramilitaries back up such accessibility with an ever-present threat that anyone who does contact the police risks coming under suspicion of being an informer. Reduced contact between locals and the incumbent security forces benefits the paramilitaries and allows them to generate an impression of a coherent community resisting the incumbent regime. Moreover, it enables the paramilitaries to reduce greatly the opportunities for the security forces to gain intelligence.34
The relative sophistication of the ‘justice’ system operating behind vigilante violence has often been overlooked. Most vigilante acts are neither indiscriminate nor haphazard. They are composed of a far richer range of measures than are the shootings and beatings that make newspaper headlines.35 Silke's study identifies a graduated system of Northern Ireland vigilantism ranging from warnings, temporary curfews and fines or victim restitution to more serious punishments such as acts of public humiliation, punishment beatings, shootings, expulsion and execution.36 But under conditions of intense inter-communal conflict, the insurgents are always at a disadvantage compared to the formal justice system in that they lack the resources needed, for example, to operate formal court systems or detention centres for convicted offenders.37 As a result, the paramilitaries have generally had to resort to cruder, violent but less time-consuming methods of punishing a crime.
An interesting question in this context is why an insurgent paramilitary group established to fight a national liberation struggle should devote so much effort to policing the community. Clearly, paramilitary involvement in vigilantism is guided by security concerns. Acts that are policed by paramilitaries are seen as either directly or indirectly dangerous to them. Political offences, primarily collaboration with the regime's security forces, are directly dangerous to the paramilitary organizations. Civil offences, on the other hand, such as theft, robbery, drug-dealing, joyriding, vandalism and muggings, are dangerous indirectly, as they can come to undermine the paramilitaries’ community support should they fail to respond adequately.38 The paramilitaries’ allocation of resources to policing behaviour such as throwing litter in the streets may seem bizarre, but it has to be understood in the light of their strong interconnection with their local communities. Indeed, various attempts to end vigilantism in the 1990s have failed partly because vigilantism was popular among important segments of the population.
Vigilante policing by paramilitary insurgent groups may easily deteriorate into violence, which may alienate the paramilitaries from society. Silke observes that in Northern Ireland individuals were targeted after being involved in a dispute with a member of a paramilitary organization, even if the dispute were entirely personal in nature. The paramilitaries gave immense importance to protecting their authority. The standing an individual gains within the community on becoming a paramilitary member represents one of the most tangible rewards that members receive. Consequently, the paramilitaries are very protective of their status and can respond violently to any show of disrespect. One result of this is that “it is fairly easy to conduct personal vendettas under the guise of vigilantism”.39 A number of paramilitary vigilante groups in Northern Ireland, especially among the Loyalist paramilitaries, also degenerated into organized criminal networks involved in drug-trafficking, illustrating another of the many paradoxes in the dynamics of ‘policing’ by non-state actors in divided societies.
Insurgent movements have also devoted considerable attention to self-policing, especially after they have succeeded in acquiring state-like attributes, for example territorial control, taxation and international recognition. Still, as long as a conflict continues, a guerrilla movement will hardly manage to field a well-trained police force separate from its military and paramilitary units. Two recent examples of insurgent movements which were able to create their own territorial semi-states (‘guerrilla states’) for a period of time are the Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF) and the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA). The former maintained well-disciplined security forces and developed investigation and prison sections. At the time of its military victory in 1991, there was no separate police force, leaving law and order entirely in the hands of the EPLF guerrillas. The separation of the police from the military was slow; and continued tension in the region, including the resumption of war with Ethiopia in 1998, ensured a high level of police militarization. The EPLF was reportedly “an extraordinarily well-organized” movement, but insurgent movements are liable to political fragmentation and infighting, which usually have a very direct and negative impact on the insurgents’ policing performance.40 In some cases, the ‘disciplined fighter mentality’ may be a source of strength for a post-conflict police organization and its esprit de corps. At the same time, however, insurgent warfare usually entails internecine fighting and collaborator killings, producing scars in the social fabric that are difficult to heal and threatening the legitimacy of the new police.
Good policing is heavily dependent on a cooperative public. The SPLA paid close attention to maintaining good relations with the civilian population; and to this end, it formed a relatively well-functioning civil administration and justice system, curtailed local raiding and strove to maintain discipline within its ranks.41 In fact, a recent study attributes the SPLA's remarkable revival during the 1990s to its attention to civil administration and maintenance of internal discipline and social order.42 The SPLA case also highlights the insurgents’ difficulties in forming a new formal court system and enforcing a new and unfamiliar penal code in times of civil war. This compelled them to revert to customary law and to co-opt the traditional chiefs into the SPLA's military system so as to increase discipline among its cadres and improve military–civilian relations.43 The problems of establishing effective and legitimate justice mechanisms under conditions of violent conflict were one of the foremost challenges facing the PLO in Lebanon during the 1970s and 1980s as well as during the first intifada in the Occupied Territories.44
During the 1990s, the challenge of reforming brutal, corrupt or ineffective police forces or, alternatively, of creating entirely new police forces came to be accepted as one of the most central issues on the post-conflict rehabilitation agenda.45 The argument was that states and societies emerging from civil war or protracted violent conflict suffer from a partial or total breakdown of elementary law enforcement and public order maintenance. This ‘security gap’ encourages crime, fuels discontent and heightens the risk of a resumption of hostilities.46
In his case study on police reform efforts in post-conflict Mozambique, James L. Woods observes that Mozambique's cities, which were renowned for their lack of crime even during the height of the civil war, were caught up in a crime wave against which the local police seemed almost powerless. The surge in crime stemmed from a combination of factors, primarily the lack of employment opportunities for returning migrants, refugees, decommissioned soldiers and rebels and the lack of control over army and rebel guns that “began finding [their] way into criminal hands”.47 The existing police force was considered highly corrupt and incompetent, and the result was that citizens often took the law into their own hands, Woods notes. Alternatively, when the police did act, it was sometimes with such excessive force that suspects were killed, prompting bystanders and relatives to attack and even kill police officers in revenge.48
Governments in conflict-ridden societies more often than not have lost control and oversight of the use of coercion and legal violence. In his study of disarmament and demobilization processes after civil wars in the early 1990s, Mats Berdal notes that “during periods of protracted conflict, powerful sections within the armed forces and the ‘security establishment’ have tended to find their tasks and responsibilities considerably increased”.49 The diversity of actors in the “bloated security establishment” of civil wars, their political power and their particular economic agendas were seen as dominant factors in sustaining the dynamics of internal wars.50 In nearly all the cases examined in Berdal's study, the post-conflict security sector included a variety of actors “whose tasks, precise responsibilities and remit have been ill-defined. The distinction between the regular armed forces and police in particular has often been blurred in law and more seriously in practice.”51 Insurgent militias, warlords, local paramilitary self-defence leagues, special counter-insurgency forces and secret police units often wielded considerable power alongside, or in conflict with, the official police.
Democratic policing has been, at least in official rhetoric, the ultimate aim of most police reform efforts, and so also in the Palestinian Territories. What constitutes democratic policing is seldom clearly and unambiguously defined, however. Cottam and Marenin make a useful distinction between the procedural and the substantive aspects of policing. In other words, policing can be democratic or undemocratic both in style and substance: “Procedural democratic policing abides by the norm that the police are subject to laws, rules, and professional codes and do not act arbitrarily, capriciously, corruptly, or brutally when they exercise power to coerce … Substantive democratic policing is defined by the range of social interests served and protected by the police.”52
For policing to be democratic in style, it must be genuinely accountable for possible violations of citizens’ procedural rights. Such violations range from technical errors in filling out papers to torture and mistreatment.53 The concept of legitimacy is often used to describe democratic policing. Reiner has suggested that policing should be seen as legitimate when “the broad mass of the population, and possibly even some of those who are policed against, accept the authority, the lawful right, of the police to act as they do, even if disagreeing with or regretting some specific actions”.54
The discourse of legitimacy is complex, however, and there is no simple and clear-cut boundary between legitimate/democratic and illegitimate/non-democratic policing. In post-conflict societies, the challenge of re-establishing a relationship of trust between police forces and the population, one of the cornerstones of legitimate and democratic policing, is a daunting one. Precisely because of the deep-rooted wartime legacy of political violence, there is usually a profound sense of mistrust among the population about claims that law enforcement agencies are impartial and apolitical.55
Civilian oversight and professionalism are key words in reforms promoting democratic policing. National police organizations and internal security agencies are often powerful institutions, and the development of adequate measures for civilian oversight is difficult. Wright and Mawby correctly point out that it is “not sufficient to simply use civilian oversight as a post hoc means of investigation and blame”.56 A wide range of constitutional, legal and organizational mechanisms have to be in place and operate at a variety of levels. Achieving civilian oversight of policing, then, is seen as an ambitious project that aims at a dynamic interaction between police institutions and a whole range of actors, including state institutions, community groups, non-governmental organizations and the media.57
For various reasons, civilian oversight is usually dependent upon the separation of internal and external security functions, i.e. of the police and the army. Getting the armed forces back to their barracks is seen as a key precondition for democratic policing, and assumes particular importance in societies emerging from violent conflict.58 A number of specific proposals have been advanced to promote this goal. These range from various military reform programmes to measures aimed at improving civilian control of the armed forces, especially through new budgetary practices and civilian control over business and enterprises owned and run by the military.59
At its most basic, however, democratic policing is about the political will of the reconstituted national government and its law enforcement capacity and resources. A combination of these attributes will need to be in place in order to achieve democratic policing in post-conflict situations. First, the structural components of indigenous public security, the police, the judiciary or legal code and prisons, must achieve at least a basic ability to maintain law and order. Training must be sufficient to ensure an adequate level of competence and professionalism.60 Second, and perhaps the most challenging, the structures and institutions of public security must be imbued with an ethos of public service and impartiality. This is what Hansen and Lia have termed “the behavioural reform” of the security sector.61 But this can happen only if political elites have the political will to bolster the political, judicial and societal mechanisms of accountability.
Reinstating democratic policing in post-conflict societies is fraught with difficulties and dilemmas. One of the most pressing dilemmas is how to strike a balance between popular demand for police effectiveness, on the one hand, and the rule of law and human rights, on the other. The effectiveness versus constitutionalism dilemma facing a newly created police force in a post-conflict society will be more acute if crime rates and ethnic tensions are high and/or a culture of violence prevails. Popular norms in war-torn societies are often in strong conflict with both national legislation and international human rights standards. The legacy of war has usually produced vociferous demands for summary retribution against criminals and wartime collaborators. A study of policing in Papua New Guinea observes, for example, that victims of crime “often complain that police have neglected their duty if physical maltreatment of suspects has formed no part of the interrogation”.62 An Australian police expert who participated in the police reform programme in Somalia in the early 1990s noted the great satisfaction among local Somalis, community leaders included, when a wartime criminal was executed after a 30-minute popular trial.63
Rama Mani reminds us that the choice of repressive policing may be seen as a “lesser evil” when more fundamental objectives (as perceived by the leadership) are at stake, such as avoiding a relapse into civil war, preventing genocide or achieving independence.64 Also, reforming the police does not automatically translate into lower levels of crime and violence. In fact, the opposite seems true. In Latin America, Charles Call observes that “contrary to what one might expect, judicial and police reforms embedded in dramatic transitions from war to peace have coincided with more, rather than less, violence”.65
The effectiveness versus constitutionalism dilemma illustrates broader peacebuilding and state-building dilemmas facing societies emerging from violent conflict. Roland Paris has argued that the potential for economic liberalism and the rule of law in post-conflict societies is limited because the societal system it aims to create, a liberal democratic polity and a market economy, is ill-suited for war-torn states and ineffective for establishing a stable peace.66 The introduction of a market democracy is accompanied by inherently destabilizing side-effects stemming from its competitive character. A post-conflict society cannot afford too much competition because it still contains strong internal conflicts and lacks institutional structures capable of peacefully resolving internal disputes. In the Palestinian case, the venerable objective of creating a rule of law was always measured against the need to subdue radical factions which aimed at “derailing the peace process” through political violence. Similarly, strong popular demands for ‘swift justice’ against informers, quislings and criminals prompted the Palestinian authorities to frequently ignore the basic requirements of due process. More generally, a number of studies indicate that post-conflict societies often experience a conflict transformation whereby new conflicts among former allies emerge, threatening both the civil peace and the peace settlement.67 Thus, effective and authoritarian policing appears to be a necessary stopgap measure to contain the strong internal tensions and disputes in the post-settlement environment.
The problem with a developmental paradigm that emphasizes the importance of a strong state is that it requires that a determined developmental elite, not a praetorian exploitative class, firmly holds the reins of power.68 This is usually not the case, and hence it is reasonable to challenge the common assumption that as soon as internal order in states ravaged by internal conflict has been restored, democratization and economic prosperity will follow.69 In fact, democratization often occurs as a result of internal crisis, when the ruling elites are forced to enter into a power-sharing arrangement after their attempts to repress popular unrest have proved to be futile.70 Conversely, when the incumbent regime and its coercive apparatus become stronger relative to the country's civil institutions and ‘street’ level forces of popular mobilization, they continue to suppress perceived subversives and, as a result, political participation declines and the prospects for democracy diminish. Both Paris's argument and the counter-arguments illustrate some of the intractable dilemmas of police reform in post-conflict regeneration.
One of the reasons why the effectiveness versus constitutionalism dilemma is acute in immediate post-conflict situations is related to the fact that rebuilding a professional police force is a time-consuming process. Informed estimates about the time required are bound to be uncertain and will depend on a host of uncertain variables. Halvor Hartz, a former head of the UN Civilian Police Unit at the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations, has judged in a recent study that “at least five years are needed to create a new law enforcement agency from scratch, until it is fully operational”.71 The entire recruitment process, involving announcing positions and selecting and vetting the candidates, would take at least several months. Then, a basic training course designed to give the selected personnel the absolute basic minimum knowledge of police techniques and the law would require between 6 to 12 months. At the very earliest, the first group of police officers would be ready for active policing one year after the first announcements were issued, according to Hartz's estimates. Similar estimates are found in the comprehensive study by Oakley et al., and were widely supported by police experts at a conference held in Washington, DC in October 1997 on the issue of peace operations and public security.72 There seems to be general agreement that judicial and penal system reform would take even longer than police reform.73 For this reason, societies just emerging from violent internal conflict will not have a system of professional law enforcement. Instead, police forces will be inexperienced, untrained and underpaid; they will operate without stringent judicial oversight and restraint. Even with the best of intentions, serious police abuses are bound to occur, provoking popular unrest and jeopardizing the legitimacy of the police.
Police reform alone is never sufficient in producing democratic policing. Of great importance are reforms of other state institutions, in particular the judicial and penal systems. The impact of police reform efforts will be jeopardized when the judicial process is corrupt and abusive behaviour is rampant within correctional institutions.74 A case study of the establishment of a new independent police force in Haiti after the restoration of the Aristide government in 1994 argues that the relative success of the new force was reduced by the weakness of the judiciary and the prison system: “Police officers complained that when offenders were intercepted, they either evaded prison because the penal system was dysfunctional and inadequate, or escaped trial because the courts were too inefficient to try them or so corruptible that suspects could buy their freedom.”75
Holiday and Stanley observe in their study of peacebuilding in El Salvador in the early 1990s that the most harmful defect of the peace accord was the lack of an international mandate to promote adequate judicial reforms, which stalled the progress made in reforming the police.76 Studies have also shown that frustration within the ranks of reformed or newly created police forces often comes as a result of the incapacity of the courts and the prosecutors to deal with the huge backlog of cases, which in turn stem from the paralysis of the judicial system during the preceding conflict. Police involvement in and support for vigilantism have occurred in many post-conflict situations.77
The most critical security challenge to post-conflict societies is perhaps the process of demobilization, disarmament and the reintegration into society of former combatants.78 The literature strongly emphasizes “the potentially destabilizing role” of disgruntled soldiers and ex-combatants, whose status in society has been reduced and who often face economic hardship in the post-conflict environment.79 They present a particular security challenge as they are potentially dangerous recruits to the world of organized crime and may easily instigate insurrection in the volatile post-agreement period.80
International monitoring of compliance with a peace accord's provisions for demobilization and disarmament, combined with substantial aid packages to support long-term reintegration programmes, is often seen as the essential solution to the ex-combatant problem. An incentive structure must be in place for former soldiers and guerrillas, either in the civilian sector or in a reformed army and police. Rapid demobilization may prove counterproductive and may exacerbate the security dilemma by providing little safety for the disarming and demobilizing guerrilla movement. For the newly established or reconstituted police forces, the dilemma lies in the politics of recruitment. Procedures for screening the new forces so as to weed out unqualified and undesirable individuals are important, but are difficult to carry out owing to political constraints.81 Although a clear and workable separation of military and police institutions is judged to be an essential condition for democratic policing, the need to provide employment for demobilized combatants and militants, as well as the lack of other trained personnel, often dictates the inclusion of significant numbers of former guerrillas and military personnel into the police. Rama Mani has put it succinctly: “If ex-combatants trained for warfare are inducted into the police … precisely at the moment when the distinction between the military and the police is sought to be reinforced – will the police reform ever be possible? … doing so may reinforce the nexus between police and military doctrine, and thereby perpetuate the military's influence over the police.”82
As William Stanley points out in his case study of the El Salvadorian and Guatemalan police reform processes, the inclusion of members of old police structures in the new police force, the Police Nacionale Civil, constituted a major obstacle to democratic policing. He concludes that new personnel are likely to produce better policing than ‘recycled personnel’ from the previous regime.83 In the Palestinian case, the major recruitment problem was not personnel from a previous regime but the large influx of guerrillas and streetfighters with a history of vigilantism and political violence. Although their induction was politically important, their presence clearly had a negative impact on the policing culture of the new police.
The reason for the problem of reintegrating members of old police structures lies partly in the entrenched nature of police organizations and their cultures. Marenin writes: “the police are a resilient organization and occupation. Continuities in policing will span massive social and political changes, and can be disrupted and reformed only with great difficulty.”84 Police cultures are strong and deeply entrenched. They are shaped largely by the contingencies of police work, not by training. In fact, formal training plays a marginal role in moulding police culture. Instead, the work culture is produced by the police themselves as they struggle to cope with the multiple pressures they find themselves under. Any reform effort which ignores the power of existing police cultures “is simply rhetorical tinkering and pious hope”.85
