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Policía Nacional Revolucionaria : ウィキペディア英語版
Law enforcement in Cuba

Law enforcement in Cuba is the responsibility of the National Revolutionary Police Force ((スペイン語:Policía Nacional Revolucionaria), PNR) under the administration of the Cuban Ministry of the Interior. Article 64 of the Cuban Constitution states that "Defense of the socialist motherland is every Cuban's greatest honor and highest duty."〔''UN Commission on Human Rights'', 1988. Report by the Secretary-General. United Nations, Geneva.〕 Conscription into either the armed forces or the national police force is compulsory for those over the age of 16. Nevertheless, conscripts have no choice to which service they are assigned.〔War Resisters' International (''Cuba'' ) retrieved July 2, 2007〕
Crime rates in Cuba remain significantly lower than many other major cities worldwide, with Cuban police acting strongly against any crime, particularly in Havana. Fidel Castro commented in 1998 that "The war against crime is also a war against the imperialist enemy."〔Latin-American Studies (''Police crack down on crime in Cuban capital'' ) CNN. Retrieved July 2, 2007〕 Information on murder and rape crime statistics for the country have never been released by the government, however theft was estimated to be 6,531 cases in 1988, or 62
per 100,000 population.〔World Factbook of Criminal Justice Systems (''Cuba'' ) retrieved July 2, 2007〕 The Cuban penal system contained 19,000 inmates in 1990, approximately 190 per 100,000.〔
==Administration of the PNR==
As with many countries, the PNR is under the control of the Ministry of the Interior, which in turn reports to the Council of State. The Ministry of the Interior is divided into three divisions: Security, Technical Operations, and Internal Order and Crime Prevention. The latter is further divided into corrections, fire protection, and policing.〔 The PNR reports to this subdirectorate, and is responsible for uniform policing, criminal investigation, crime prevention, juvenile delinquency, and traffic control. The PNR conducts these activities across the 14 provinces of Cuba, each of which has its own police chief who reports to a central PNR command in Havana.〔
While the Internal Order and Crime Prevention controls the PNR, which is responsible for day-to-day policing, the Security division of the Ministry of the Interior is responsible for crimes such as espionage, sabotage,
and offenses against state security.〔 All these divisions of the Ministry of the Interior and the PNR have been closely associated with the Revolutionary Armed Forces since 1959.
In addition, the PNR is supported by the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR), a police intelligence auxiliary police organization using ''la guardia'', a nightly neighborhood watch. The CDR also handle issues relating to water and energy conservation, pet inoculation, and public health.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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