Egypt Police
Cairo street scene with traffic police officer
Courtesy Susan Becker
The Nasser and Sadat administrations initiated a number of
police and law-enforcement reforms. They strengthened police
organization and improved public security. According to official
statements, the incidence of serious crimes decreased because of
these changes. Nevertheless, the tight political security enforced
under Nasser created a police state. Although controls were greatly
eased by Sadat, widespread dislike of the police persisted.
Egypt's national police had a wide variety of functions and
responsibilities. The national police was responsible for
maintaining law and order, preventing and detecting crime,
supporting the court system through the collection of evidence, and
other police duties, including processing passports, screening
immigrants, operating prisons, controlling traffic, guarding
special events and celebrities, suppressing smuggling and narcotics
trafficking, preventing political subversion and sabotage, guarding
transport and utility installations, preventing black marketing,
and participating in civil defense.
Turkish and French systems influenced the organization of
Egypt's police force until the late nineteenth century, when the
British modified the system. The national-level police force, set
up in 1883, was trained and staffed by British officials and became
the basis for the system that was still used in 1990. In 1922, when
the British, with reservations, relinquished sovereignty to the
Egyptians, the police became a virtual private agency of the
monarch, and police administration became even more highly
centralized. After the 1952 Revolution (which was supported by the
police), all police functions were placed under the direction of
the Ministry of Interior.
As of early 1987, the size of the regular police force was
reported to be about 122,000; an estimated 40,000 positions were
unfilled because police jobs paid poorly and offered few benefits.
A typical policeman in 1986 earned between ŁE60 and ŁE70 (US$30 to
US$35) a month. Salaries in real terms were lower in 1986 than in
1976. According to one Egyptian analysis, police salaries were low
in part as a result of excessive allocations of funds for other
purposes. The Ministry of Interior's budget had increased 400
percent over an eight-year period, but much of this money was spent
on equipment used primarily for controlling riots.
The low salaries encouraged many police officers to accept
small bribes (in exchange for overlooking traffic citations, for
example) to compensate for their unrealistically low wages. At a
higher level, police corruption took the form of complicity in drug
smuggling. The creation of law-enforcement bodies within the
ministries of supply, transportation, and finance, and within the
customs service diminished the authority of the police. According
to one source, Egypt had thirty-four separate police forces as of
1986.
Data as of December 1990
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