User:Kiimbo/sandbox

Evaluation of a Wikipedia Article
Predictive policing

Other relevant comments in regard to equity and balance.
Overall, the article appears to be of moderate quality. It is an excellence starting point and with a few improvements to its balance and worldwide representativeness as well as an expansion of its detailed information, the article could easily become of a much higher quality.

Minor Editing
Central Intelligence Organisation

The Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) is the national intelligence agency or "secret police" of Zimbabwe. It was developed in the early 1960s as an external intelligence-gathering arm of the British South Africa Police Special Branch; under Southern Rhodesian Prime Minister Winston Field.

History
The CIO was formed in Rhodesia in 1963 following the dissolution of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. The CIO took over from the Federal Intelligence and Security Bureau, which was a coordinating bureau analyzing intelligence gathered by the British South Africa Police (BSAP) and the police forces of Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland.[citation needed]

The first head of the CIO was Police Deputy Commissioner, Ken Flower, who, during his tenure, also oversaw the BSAP's Special Branch Headquarters incorporated within the CIO. The Special Branch retained its internal security function within the BSAP before gaining independence in April 1980.

Flower maintained his role as of head of the CIO after a majority rule in 1980. Despite rumors that he had covertly and intermittently plotted with the British intelligence services and MI6 to undermine Ian Smith's government, Flower shared a strictly professional relationship with the heads of all other intelligence agencies.