INTERPOL media release
05 October 2004 |
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INTERPOL calls for wider data access for the world's police
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| INTERPOL President Espigares Mira
confers with Secretary General Noble |
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CANCUN, Mexico - INTERPOL Secretary General Ronald
K. Noble launched the organization's 73rd
INTERPOL General Assembly with a call for member countries to give more rank
and file police officers direct access to critical information in INTERPOL's criminal
databases.
'Our purpose must be to bring the right information to frontline police officers,
in the right format and at the right time,' the Secretary General told delegates
from more than 120 INTERPOL member countries. 'I call upon all of you to give
direct access to INTERPOL databases to all police officers who have a need for
it.'
'The global fight against international crime and
terrorism
will be most efficient if international police information can be shared at
all levels - local, regional and international.'
INTERPOL is the world's largest international police organization with 181
member countries on five continents.
More than 450 delegates gathered in Mexico to address issues confronting police
who combat trans-border crime. In the four days of conference proceedings delegates
will discuss law enforcement issues related to terrorism,
organized crime,
and drugs, trafficking
in human beings and a range of other international offences which require
global responses and solutions.
Delegates will also be updated on the expansion and successes of INTERPOL's
databases in areas such as stolen travel documents, DNA
and fingerprints.
'For INTERPOL to maintain its leading position in the field of international
police co-operation, it must continue to define its basic strategic priorities,
while continually adapting to changing types of crime,' said INTERPOL President
Jesús Espigares
Mira.
Mr Espigares Mira's four year term of office ends at this General Assembly
and his successor will be elected by delegates on Friday, 8 October.
Mexico's Attorney General, Rafael Macedo de la Concha, told delegates: 'INTERPOL
has set up a common front against trans-border crime. We all know we will be
more vulnerable if isolated.'
The INTERPOL Secretary General also said he was eager to promote co-operation
between international organizations in the fight against crime. 'No agency
in these complex times can afford to go it alone,' Mr. Noble said.
INTERPOL has recently appointed its first ever representative to the United
Nations. Dr K. Ulrich Kersten, the former head of the German federal police
agency BKA, will take up his duties in New York on 25 October 2004
INTERPOL offers police in its member countries a range of crucial services
and databases to fight international crime, including
wanted persons notices,
a variety of databases (including fingerprints, stolen travel documents, stolen
vehicles and
child abuse images),
criminal analysis services and anti-terrorism
programmes.