Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Police – 999; Ambulance – 997; Fire – 998; Traffic police – 993. Singapore: 999: 995: Mobile phones – 112 or 911; Non-emergency ambulance – 1777; Police hotline – 1800 255 0000; Traffic police – 6547 0000. Sri Lanka: 119: 110: Traffic police – 112 691 111. Syria: 112: 110: 113: Traffic police – 115. Republic of China 110: 119
Area codes 809, 829, and 849 are telephone area codes in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for the Dominican Republic.Like all NANP members, the Dominican Republic uses country code 1, and has similar dialing procedures for dialing the 10-digit national telephone numbers, which consist of the area code, a three-digit central office code, and a four-digit line number.
Dominican Republic police pick-up trucks. On May 17, 1966, a general training school for military and police officers was created in the DR. Two years later on June 20, 1968, the National Police Officer Training School was established in San Cristobal under the surpervision of the school's first director, Eulogio Benito.
In 2006, an analysis by the United Nations indicates an approximate median of 300 police officers per 100,000 inhabitants. [1] Only nine countries disclosed values lower than 100 officers per 100,000 inhabitants. [1] The highest median of police officers – around 400 – was observed in West Asia, Eastern and Southern Europe. [1]
An international covenant on dirtbikes and ATVs negotiated by Rhode Islanders and Dominicans. The shipment of the dirtbikes and ATVs to the Dominican Republic was the goal of a pact that Bakari ...
911, sometimes written 9-1-1, is an emergency telephone number for Argentina, Canada, the Dominican Republic, Fiji, Jordan, Mexico, Pakistan, Maldives, Palau, Panama, the Philippines, Sint Maarten, the United States, [2] and Uruguay, as well as the North American Numbering Plan (NANP), one of eight N11 codes.
112 (emergency telephone number) Operator in Kraków responding to a 112 phone call. 112 is a common emergency telephone number that can be dialed free of charge from most mobile telephones and, in some countries, fixed telephones in order to reach emergency services (ambulance, fire and rescue, police).
Dominican Republic: Dominican Republic National Police: Policía Nacional Dominicana: France: National Gendarmerie: Gendarmerie Nationale: Established in 1791 and member of FIEP and the European Gendarmerie Force [23] [3] [4] Gabon: National Gendarmerie: Gendarmerie Nationale: Formed in 1960 following independence with Gabonization occurring in ...