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The two sides sat down to discuss practical ways of strengthening cooperation between the security services and the local community—with the shared aim of keeping the area safe and ensuring that relations between residents and authorities remain solid. It was the kind of conversation that does not happen in a headquarters meeting room; it happened on the ground, in the community itself.
Brigadier General Mohammed Al Ghazal was direct about the purpose of such outings. Sharjah Police, he said, does not wait for problems to arise before engaging with communities. These visits are for hearing residents' thoughts, observations, and suggestions. That feedback, he added, feeds directly into how the force develops its work and improves the services it delivers across all parts of the emirate.
Al Ghazal also pointed to the growing tourism footprint in areas like Shees as a factor that shapes the force's priorities. Regions attracting increasing numbers of visitors require a more visible and more active security presence, he said, as well as stronger partnerships with local bodies. The goal is a safe environment that works for residents and visitors alike — not one or the other.
The field tour took in the area's facilities and roads, giving officers a first-hand look at security conditions and the standard of services currently on offer. It also allowed the team to identify where the area's needs are most pressing, particularly given the uptick in tourism activity recently.
The day wound up with a gathering at the council of Mohammed Khamis Al Naqbi, where officers and residents sat together and spoke plainly about what is working and what is not. People voiced their concerns and proposed ideas, and both sides departed with a clearer understanding of the next steps. The broader push is to make sure that when someone in Shees has a problem, it does not get lost somewhere between the local level and the General Command of Sharjah Police — it gets heard, and it gets acted on.