A new issue of the Police Magazine documents the Open Doors experience and highlights the development of the security facility.
The General Directorate of National Security has released the twenty-fifth issue of the Police Magazine, dedicating its cover to the sixth edition of the Open Doors event under the slogan “Community Policing and Proximity Integration.” This new issue chronicles various stages of the event held from May 12 to May 20, 2025, and showcases ongoing efforts to enhance the security institution’s openness to its community environment and to establish the concept of community policing.
The magazine includes extensive coverage of the corridors and spaces available to the public, including the automatic identification corridor, the biology corridor, digital evidence analysis, the weapons and ammunition corridor, drug and toxicology presentations, and nuclear, biological, and chemical threat assessments. It also emphasized the special forces pavilion from the General Directorate for Territorial Surveillance, the crowd control mobile units, the central intervention team, the forensic police, and mounted police, along with road safety, public awareness, digital identity, smart borders, and legal protection for women and children, as well as the National Security Museum.
The issue also focused on the 69th anniversary celebration of the establishment of national security, showcasing the integration of modern technology in security displays, including live demonstrations of the “Security” smart patrol as a model of an artificial intelligence system designed to support public safety, alongside digital content and advanced technical simulation displays. Furthermore, it covered various practical workshops, such as fingerprint collection and close-up imaging, along with the scientific and technical police pavilion and spaces dedicated to managing police professionals’ careers.
Through this publication, the Police Magazine continues its role in documenting the transformations within national security, keeping pace with the development of the security facility, and getting closer to citizens as essential partners in maintaining public order.