Мазмунга өтүү

Файл:Legal education in Chad 2010 (5080920938).jpg

Барактын мазмуну башка тилдерде жеткиликтүү эмес.
Википедия дан

Legal_education_in_Chad_2010_(5080920938).jpg (600 × 420 пиксель, файлдын өлчөмү: 208 KB, MIME түрү: image/jpeg)

Бул файл Викиказына долбоорунан. Ошондой эле башка долбоорлордо пайдаланылышы мүмкүн. Төмөндө файлды сыпаттоо барагындагы сыпаттамасы көрсөтүлгөн.

Жыйынтыгы

Сыпаттама

U.S. Army Africa Lt. Col. Stephen Salerno congratulates a student upon completion of military legal education in N'Dajema, Chad, September 2010.

U.S. Army photo by Capt. Chayah Saahene

Judge Advocates Lt. Col. Stephen Salerno and Lt. Col. Timothy Tuckey of U.S. Army Africa’s Office of the Staff Judge Advocate (OSJA) recently returned from two weeks in Chad and the Democratic Republic of Congo, respectively, where they conducted legal education courses for a program hosted by the Defense Institute for International Legal Studies.

Salerno is a civilian attorney adviser in Army Africa’s OSJA, and a lieutenant colonel in the 91st Legal Support Office. Tuckey works in the international law section of Army Africa OSJA. The courses provided legal education and resources to military and related civilian personnel in two of Army Africa’s partner nations.

When DIILS, a leading defense security cooperation resource for professional legal education, training, and rule of law programs, requested two experienced attorneys to travel to Africa for two weeks to teach law courses, U.S. Africa Command answered the call and U.S. Army Africa provided Salerno and Tuckey as the manpower.

Salerno’s Chad DIILS class, which took place in the warm and slightly rainy capital city, N’Djamena, focused on mentoring forces to combat corruption. Salerno taught courses that specifically addressed corruption in post-conflict societies, procurement corruption, transparency and accountability.

Salerno’s students consisted of approximately 90 high-level members of the Chadian military, law enforcement, government agencies, non-governmental organizations and the media. With two Togolese interpreters at hand, Salerno communicated via simultaneous interpretation into French. Lectures were augmented by practical exercises of group problem solving. Students wore everything from vibrantly colored tribal dress to three-piece suits and artistically designed henna tattoos, Salerno said.

“In an animated discussion about the importance of transparency and accountability, one student replied that it is up to us, the people in this room, to effect change and fight corruption in Chad,” said Salerno. “Seeing education evolve into empowerment is extremely rewarding.”

Tuckey’s program in the Democratic Republic of Congo focused on mentoring Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of Congo (FARDC) forces to maintain good order and discipline through the development of a professional military. Class topics included command responsibility, the law of armed conflict, humanitarian law, sexual violence, ethics and corruption, he said.

Tuckey spent the first week training 39 officers of 1st Region FARDC staff in Bandundu, in a makeshift classroom crafted from a room inside a restaurant. and the second week working with 44 field-grade officers at the general headquarters of Ituri’s Operational Zone in Bunia.

His interpreter spoke mostly French, but also incorporated Lingala, the universal language of the Congolese military, into the presentation, Tuckey said.

“Some of these students have been in the military for a long period of time and some are former rebels who have only recently been incorporated into the military force,” he said.

The Democratic Republic of Congo has had an ongoing internal armed conflict, Tuckey said.

“It is really a testament of their professionalism to see such a mixture of students sitting side-by-side in a classroom learning together,” he said.

To learn more about U.S. Army Africa visit our official website at <a href="http://www.usaraf.army.mil" rel="nofollow">www.usaraf.army.mil</a>

Official Twitter Feed: <a href="https://www.twitter.com/usarmyafrica" rel="nofollow">www.twitter.com/usarmyafrica</a>

Official YouTube video channel: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/usarmyafrica" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/usarmyafrica</a>
Дата
Булак Legal education in Chad 2010
Автор US Army Africa from Vicenza, Italy

Лицензиялоо

w:en:Creative Commons
атрибуция
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
Сиз буларга эркинсиз:
  • бөлүшүү – чыгарманы көчүрүү, жайылтуу жана өткөрүп берүү
  • ремикс кылуу – чыгарманы ылайыкташтыруу
Төмөнкү шарттарда:
  • атрибуция – Сиз тийиштүү насыя берип, лицензияга шилтеме калтырып жана өзгөртүүлөр болсо көрсөтүшүңүз керек. Сиз муну кандайдыр бир акылга сыярлык жол менен жасай аласыз, бирок лицензиар сизди же сиздин колдонууңузду жактырган кандайдыр бир жол менен эмес.
This image was originally posted to Flickr by US Army Africa at https://flickr.com/photos/36281822@N08/5080920938 (archive). It was reviewed on 21 август 2018 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

21 август 2018

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts англисче

creator англисче

some value

author name string англисче: US Army Africa
Flickr user ID англисче: 36281822@N08

published in англисче

copyright status англисче

copyrighted англисче

24 сентябрь 2010

captured with англисче

Nikon D40 англисче

exposure time англисче

0.01666666666666666666 секунда

f-number англисче

3.8

focal length англисче

20 millimetre

ISO speed англисче

400

media type англисче

image/jpeg

Файлдын тарыхы

Файлдын мурдагы нускасын көрүү үчүн тийиштүү убакыт/датаны басыңыз

Убакыт/датаМиниатюраӨлчөмКолдонуучуТүшүндүрмө
учурдагы18:56, 21 август 201818:56, 21 август 2018 -дагы версиясы үчүн кичирейтилген сүрөтү600 × 420 (208 KB)LiverpoolpicsTransferred from Flickr via #flickr2commons

Бул файл төмөнкү баракта колдонулат:

Файлдын глобалдык колдонулушу

Бул файл төмөнкү викилерде колдонулат:

Метамаалымат