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Nepal police on duty at Fulpati 2013 at Kathmandu Durbar Square Traffic police in Kathmandu is challenging for the officers due to high pollution in the city. Nepal Police (Nepali: नेपाल प्रहरी, romanized: Nēpāl praharī) is the national and primary law enforcement agency of Nepal.
The Central Investigation Bureau (CIB; Nepali: केन्द्रिय अनुसन्धान ब्युरो, romanized: Kēndriya anusandhāna byurō) is the national investigation agency of Nepal which is run under Nepal Police. It is sometimes referred as Central Investigation Bureau of Nepal Police.
Nepal Police; Nepali Army; Nepal Red Cross Society; Nepal Agricultural Research Council (NARC) Nepal Telecom; National Information Technology Center (NITC) Nepal Academy of Tourism and Hotel Management; Nepal Airlines Corporation; Nepal Academy of Science and Technology (NAST) Nepal Health Research Council; Nepal Medical Council
National Police Academy is the main training academy of the Nepal Police. It was established with the Police Regulation of 1993. CPTC was founded 1956. [1] The Police Academy is located in Kathmandu, capital city of Nepal. It was formerly known as Central Police Training Centre (CPTC) established on the onset with the police regulation of 1993.
The armed police force of Nepal doing morning training at Halchowk, Swayambhu, Nepal. An Armed Police Force of Nepal personnel in Kathmandu. The Nepalese Armed Police Force is a land force tasked with counter-insurgency operations in Nepal. It functions as a semi-military wing, and occupies a sort of dual role as both military and law enforcement.
It is independent of the Nepal Army. Although once brought under the Army in the name of "Unified Command", it is taken as a force separate from the Army. [1] In the days of its establishment, Nepal Police personnel were mainly drawn from the armed forces of the Nepali Congress Party which fought against feudal Rana autocracy in Nepal.
The inspector general of police (IGP) is the senior-most and highest ranked police officer of Nepal and the head of the Nepalese Police Force, who oversees all police activities throughout the country and reports directly to the Ministry of Home Affairs and is appointed by the government of Nepal for a tenure of four years, although two IGPs have served for six years.