PNP Panganiban
PNP Panganiban
PNP Panganiban
Enforcement Coordinating Committee (NALECC). This body convenes regularly to foster cooperation and
coordination among all law enforcement agencies in the country.
It also supports several law enforcement agencies like the Philippine Center for Transnational Crimes
(PCTC) and the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency.
It is also linked with the International Enforcement Community thru the INTERPOL, with the head of the
PCTC as the Secretariat, and the Chief PNP as the Chief of the National Central Bureau and a member of
the ASEAN Chiefs of Police or ASEANPOL, and a partner of the United Nations Center for International
Crime Prevention (UNCICP).
It is the body that links the PNP with the other law enforcement agencies. This body convenes regularly
to foster cooperation and coordination among all law enforcement agencies in the country.
“Strengthening the Operational, Administrative and Information Support System of the PCTC” – This
Executive Order sought to strengthen the operational, administrative and information support system
and capacity of PCTC by placing the folowing agencies/offices/instrumentalities of under the general
supervision and control of the the Center:
At the heart of every INTERPOL member country is a National Central Bureau (NCB), linking national
police with INTERPOL’s global network and It serves as the contact point for all INTERPOL activities in
the field. NCBs are the lifeblood of INTERPOL, contributing to INTERPOL’s criminal databases and
cooperating together on cross-border investigations, operations and arrests.
In the Philippines, the INTERPOL National Central Bureau Manila is under the Philippine Center on
Transnational Crime (PCTC).
The PCTC coordinates all transnational crime operations carried out by other government agencies of
the Philippines. It designs new projects to strengthen the country’s combined response and ensures the
efficient exchange of information.
The PCTC recommends ways to better prevent transnational crime and to detect and apprehend
criminals operating across borders. A central database of national and international legislation
underpins these recommendations. Activities are reinforced through training programmes delivered in
cooperation with national government agencies, other countries and international organizations.
INTERPOL is not a police force. It is the machinery for international police cooperation and
communication. The principles on which Interpol’s functioning is based have stood the best time. It has
become clear that the organization cannot have teams of detectives with supranational powers who
travel around investigating cases in different countries. International police cooperation is the
coordinated action of the member countries’ police forces, all of which supply and request information
and services.
It serves as the office and main coordinating body for international police cooperation against
transnational crimes representing all law enforcement agencies in the Philippines
ASEANPOL
ASEANAPOL is the National Police organization for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN).This is composed of 10 (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam) Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries, plus nine
other countries.
The ASEAN national police forces to closely monitor and exchange information on newly-emerging
militant and radical groups, and take action on other pressing regional security concerns on
international fugitives, cross-border law enforcement, illegal wildlife trade, counterfeit currency
syndicates, illegal firearms, smuggling and piracy in the high seas.
It is an international forum for national governments, local authorities, public agencies, specialized
institutions, and non-government organizations to exchange experience, emerging knowledge, and
policies and programmes in crime prevention and community safety. It assists cities and countries to
reduce delinquency, violent crime and insecurity.
It is a partner agency of the PNP by helping it put knowledge into action by making the knowledge base
for strategic crime prevention and community safety better known and more accessible worldwide,
encouraging the use of good practices and tools to produce community safety, fostering exchanges
between countries and cities, criminal justice institutions and community-based organizations, providing
technical assistance and training.