News story

Reservist helps train Afghan Police

Territorial Army soldier Lance Corporal Aiden Cooper is currently working with the Afghan Uniform Police to help nurture an efficient police force who can maintain the security of the country themselves.

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Lance Corporal Aiden Cooper, from 253 Provost Company of the Royal Military Police

Lance Corporal Aiden Cooper, from 253 Provost Company of the Royal Military Police, based in Southampton [Picture: Sergeant Andy Reddy, Crown Copyright/MOD 2012]

Twenty-year-old Lance Corporal Aiden Cooper, from 253 Provost Company of the Royal Military Police, based in Southampton, is working with the Afghan Uniform Police (AUP) in Lashkar Gah as a police advisor, along with a group of soldiers from the Queen’s Own Gurkha Logistic Regiment. He said:

We operate in Lashkar Gah and get out to checkpoints, advising on police matters as well as lifesaving skills they use out on the ground.

All the policemen have different abilities and skills, so we need to establish what level they’re at before we can conduct training with them. We also watch the progress that is being made in their skills as well.

This week, Lance Corporal Cooper and the advisory team have been in the area of Kandahar Zanzeer, the evocative Kandahar Gate in Lashkar Gah District, training and advising the policemen of the area. He added:

We conducted a vehicle checkpoint with the police, and they worked well there, showing good skills and very well constructed checkpoint.

The training that the Afghan police go through with the advisory team is the same across Helmand, and across Afghanistan, looking to nurture an independent and efficient police force who can maintain the security of the country.

Lance Corporal Cooper working with the Afghan Uniform Police in Lashkar Gah

Lance Corporal Cooper working with the Afghan Uniform Police in Lashkar Gah as a police advisor [Picture: Sergeant Andy Reddy, Crown Copyright/MOD 2012]

While out in Afghanistan, Lance Corporal Cooper has been adjusting to his first tour of duty quickly. Working alongside regular soldiers, he believes that the training he’s been given has prepared him just as well as his colleagues:

I don’t think you’d be deployed out on the ground if you weren’t up to the standard of a regular soldier. We’re all out here to do the same job; being TA doesn’t put you in any less danger than any other soldier out on the ground.

When you can’t get in touch with home that can be a problem, but the early starts and the heat are something that you get used to. When you’re out for a few days, you’re tired and carrying a lot of kit, that’s your job and that’s what you sign up to do.

Lance Corporal Cooper’s fiancee, Lauren, and the rest of his family are the foremost things on his mind, and he had a simple message for them:

I miss Lauren loads, but leave is coming up soon and then I’ll be back with them.

Published 14 June 2012