PULAPOL
Pusat Latihan Polis | |
Seal of the Police Training Centre of Malaysia | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | 20 November 1904 |
Commandant | SAC Dato' Zahari Bin Yusoff |
Location | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
Campus | Semarak Street |
Affiliations | Royal Malaysia Police |
The Malaysian Police Training Centre (Malay: Pusat Latihan Polis, PULAPOL) is the oldest police academy in Malaysia and the training institute for Royal Malaysia Police. It is located at Semarak Street (formerly Henry Gurney Street), Kuala Lumpur. It is the place where the police is trained under the government. Learning in PULAPOL encompasses training aspect, from academic or practical. PULAPOL has five branches: PULAPOL Kuala Lumpur, Jalan Semarak, PULAPOL Bukit Sentosa, Rawang, PULAPOL Ayer Hitam, Negeri Sembilan, PULAPOL Segamat, Johore, PULAPOL Langkawi, Kedah and PULAPOL Sarawak. The police trainees will be guaranteed to have a job and will be trained for six or nine months there.
History
On 20 November 1904, the first Police Training Centre was formed by Captain Graham, the Malay States Guides container officer. It was located at Bluff Road which was later renamed as Bukit Aman Street. It is now the location of Bukit Aman's Police Headquarters which used VB to be called Malay States Guides Command Headquarters of Kuala Lumpur. The area consists of 249.5 acres or 41.6 hectare. In 1905, the centre admitted its first intake with 207 Malay and 219 Indian recruits.
In 1920, a new Police Training Centre was proposed when the old facility was unable to accommodate the increasing intake of the police trainees. The effort to build the new centre was postponed because of the economic depression until it was reviewed five years later. An area near the Gurney Road was chosen and throughout the 1930s, constructions for the academy was done. In October 1940, the Police Training Centre in Bluff Road transferred to the new Police Training Centre at Gurney Road (currently Jalan Semarak), Kuala Lumpur.
In 1941, the training programme was halted because of the invasion by the Japanese Imperial Army. Most of the police officers from the centre were called to serve against the military attack and at the beginning of the occupation until eight police officers were left.
Once Malaya had fallen under the Japanese occupation, the Police Training Centre was turned into the Japanese's Military Police Headquarters. In August 1945, British army retook the training centre and later it was reconstructed as the largest training centre for the police force. During 1945 and 1946, Mr. J.D. Fairhead acted as the Police Training Centre Commander after Japanese rule. From then to 1957, the training centre was commanded by the British military personnel.
In 1957, Malaya achieved her independence from the Britain and the training centre was then given to Sir Merican Bin Sutan as its first Malay Commandant from 25 November 1957 to 24 November 1959. From 1940 to 2007, the training centre was led by at least 40 Commandants in its lifetime. By 1977, this institution was now familiarly known as PULAPOL (Police Training Centre) and trained at least 2,200 recruits per session.
First female commandant
On 16 January 2014, SAC Nahariah Hussein, 57, a D1 assistant principal director (Administration) of Bukit Aman CID, was appointed as the 42nd commandant of PULAPOL when she took over from SAC Zulkifli Mohamad bringing her as a first female commandant since it was established in 1904.[1]
References
- ↑ "Pulapol gets its first woman commandant since its set-up in 1904". The Borneo Post. 17 January 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2014.