Lithuanian Interior Ministry to assess police reform in early 2018

The essence of the reform, which was finalized last August, was to merge the criminal police force with the public security police force.

“We’ll perform a comprehensive assessment of the police reform. We’ll look at whether there are global systemic weaknesses that make criminal acts possible,” Interior Minister Eimutis Misiūnas told BNS on Monday.

“The reform assessment results will have an impact on the evaluation of (the performance of) the police commissioner general,” he added.

The minister expects the assessment of the police reform to be performed next months and that of the police commissioner general’s performance by mid-February at the latest, adding that the reform will be evaluated based on statistics on crimes committed and on crime detection and prevention.

Top police officials launched the reform last year, saying that it would boost public security, increase the number of police officers on patrol and improve working conditions for police officers. Some buildings and employees were made redundant by combining the functions of public security and criminal police.

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According to the police, the reform has helped to increase the number of police officers on the street, response more promptly to urgent calls and raise officers’ salaries. The average daily number of patrol teams has increased by 80 percent since the launch of the reform to around 630 teams.

The police say that officers are being supplied with new cars and weapons and will next year receive new uniforms.

“As the police chief, I regard the changes as positive. The crime and crime detection rates remain basically unchanged, but we have more patrols on the street, and, statistically, we arrive at the scene of an incident faster and we are able to help people, which is our main mission,” Pernavas told BNS in a comment sent to BNS by a police spokesman.

Officers are concerned about a rather large number of murders committed recently.

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