http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0703/S00124.htm

New Commissioner Takes Over UN Police In Kosovo
Wednesday, 7 March 2007, 3:38 pm
Press Release: United Nations
New Commissioner Takes Over As Head Of UN Police In Kosovo

A veteran British police officer with wide experience in international
law enforcement took over as the new United Nations police commissioner
in Kosovo today after his predecessor was asked to resign following the
deaths of two people in a clash with pro-independence demonstrators in
the Albanian-majority Serbian province.

Richard Monk, first Director and Senior Police Adviser to the Secretary
General of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
(OSCE) from 2002 to 2006, was appointed by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
to replace Stephen J. Curtis, who stepped down last month.

Mr. Ban’s Special Representative in Kosovo Joachim Rücker asked for Mr.
Curtis’s resignation after police used rubber bullets against
pro-independence demonstrators in the province, which the UN has run
ever since North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces drove out
Yugoslav troops in 1999 amid brutal ethnic fighting.

The demonstration followed the unveiling of UN proposals for the future
status of the province, where Albanians outnumber Serbs and others by 9
to 1. The provisional plan, drawn up by Mr. Ban’s Special Envoy for the
status process Martti Ahtisaari, calls for Kosovo to have the right to
govern itself and conclude international agreements, including
membership in international bodies, with an international civilian and
military presence supervising the new arrangements.

But it does not specifically mention independence, which Serbia rejects
and which many ethnic Albanians seek.

During his time at OSCE Mr. Monk founded and was head of the Strategic
Police Matters Unit responsible for capacity/institution-building,
particularly in the former Soviet republics in Central Asia and the
Southern Caucasus. He also carried out a ‘Study of Policing in
Yugoslavia’ that forms the basis of international police aid to Serbia
and Montenegro.
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As Commissioner of the UN International Police Task Force (IPTF) in
Bosnia during 1998-99, he was responsible for rebuilding and reforming
the police forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 2000, he was a member of
the UN Secretary-General’s Panel on Peace Operations, which reviewed
criticisms of past peacekeeping operations.

As a police officer for 35 years in the United Kingdom, Mr. Monk served
in several senior positions including as Head of Scotland Yard Branches
dealing with Crime, Community Affairs and Crime Prevention and as
Assistant Chief Constable (Crime) for the Devon and Cornwall Constabulary.

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