PNP inks pact with South Korea on crime data management system improvement
PNP chief Gen. Jose Melencio C. Nartatez, Jr. meets with top officials of the Embassy of the Republic of Korea for the ceremonial signing of the Record of Discussions (ROD) for the “Establishment of Criminal Investigation Data Management and Analysis System Project” on May 28, 2026, at Camp Crame, Quezon City.
Gen. Jose Melencio C. Nartatez, Jr., chief of the Philippine National Police (PNP), wants to have a piece of South Korean anti-crime measures in terms of police modernization, particularly on crime data management systems.
The statement was buoyed by the partnership with the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) last week to develop the Criminal Investigation Data Management and Analysis System (CIDMAS), a unified crime data platform designed to modernize law enforcement operations nationwide.
For Nartatez, such a move will result in further improving investigative efficiency, speeding up response times, and strengthening case resolution across all units.
“By consolidating our separate crime databases into a single platform, we are eliminating redundant data encoding and giving our field investigators rapid access to critical, actionable information,” said Nartatez.
Under the agreement, CIDMAS will consolidate fragmented crime investigation databases into a single system, reducing manual encoding and improving data verification, coordination, and access to critical information for investigators.
Nartatez said the system is expected to speed up case resolution, strengthen crime analysis, and enhance overall crime prevention efforts through a more integrated and data-driven policing approach.
The PNP has been working with South Korean counterparts as they are known for their integrated law enforcement systems and technology-driven policing approach.
“This modernization will significantly reduce our reaction times and substantially increase our case resolution rates across all regional units,” Nartatez said.
Drawing lessons from South Korea’s policing framework, he said South Korea’s advanced law enforcement model demonstrates the power of utilizing integrated technology for proactive, rather than reactive, policing.
“Through this collaboration, the PNP is adopting world-class methodologies in big-data crime analysis and strategic monitoring,” said Nartatez.