Descripción del servicio
It consists of receiving requests from young people interested in joining “POLITUR”, to provide their security services in the different tourist centers of the country.
A quién va dirigido
Departamento que lo ofrece
Información de contacto
Requerimientos o requisitos
Procedimientos a seguir
1. Communication announcing the opening of the contest to participate and setting the date for the start of exams by group. Each group must be examined in the following order and aspects: External exploratory medical evaluation by a Medical Commission of the Selected Military Hospital. Said commission must issue a Legal Medical Certificate stating that the applicant is fit to receive the other corresponding exams.
2. Physical test of each one, whose results will be communicated immediately and those who fail will be automatically excluded from the process. In addition to those who passed the exams will be informed about the date of the next test.
3. Those who have passed the physical tests will receive an exam of academic level and general culture, on the areas of knowledge that they received during their Secondary Education studies. Those who failed will be excluded from the process, while the others will be set a date for the psychotechnical exam. Evaluation of the Physical Appearance of the Applicant: The physical appearance is taken into account when evaluating the applicant, so in this initial stage of the debugging it is sought if the individual wears earrings, tattoos, has scars etc. Anti-doping test. At this stage we take care of carrying out the corresponding medical tests to verify if the applicant has used any type of drug or controlled substance. Purification of judicial records and police files. At this stage our Intelligence Agents verify that the applicant does not have any file in the Central File of the National Police, D.N.I., DNCD, or in any of the agencies of intelligence of the Armed Forces.
Horario de prestación
Monday to Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.Costo
Free of chargeTiempo de realización
Reserved for each institution according to places.Canal de Prestación
- On-site during the evaluation and training process.Información adicional
Responsible person
Director of the Security School.
Legal Basis of the Service
Organic Law of the National Police 590-16 dated July 15, 2016.
“Not Really Public: The Truth About Punta Cana’s ‘Public’ Beaches”
I was going to stay quiet… but I can’t.
I came to Punta Cana expecting beauty—and I found it. The beaches, the roads, the development… everything looks like paradise.
Until you try to actually access it.
I went to Playa Blanca and Playa Juanillo—both promoted everywhere as “public beaches.” White sand. Calm water. “Must visit.”
But here is the truth no one tells you:
They are not public.
You cannot just walk in. You are stopped at a gate. You are told to spend at least $50 per person just to enter. And during Semana Santa? Not even that was enough. We were simply turned away.
When I said, “But this is a public beach,” the guard looked at me and said:
“The only way to enter freely is by helicopter.”
Let that sink in.
A “public” beach… only accessible if you fly in.
At that moment, it stopped being about a beach. It became about something bigger.
How is it possible that in a country surrounded by natural beauty, even locals—and yes, even tourists—are blocked from spaces that should belong to everyone?
It reminded me of “Hawái” by Bad Bunny. The idea that paradise gets turned into something exclusive, something controlled, something that no longer belongs to the people.
This is how it starts—little by little. Access gets restricted. Prices go up. Gates go up. And suddenly, what was once for everyone… is no longer yours.
That is why people fight for their rights. Because if we stay quiet, the “big elephant” will keep moving forward—until there is nothing left for the average person.
Punta Cana is beautiful. No doubt.
But beauty without access is not paradise.
It is exclusion.
Found trip
La compañia found trip de pinta cana RD no responde por nada, no dan garantia ni reagendamiento en su excursiones
Denuncia de Incidente Grave: Agresión Física y Extorsión
Lugar de los hechos: Hotel RIU República, Punta Cana.
Fecha y Hora: 04 de marzo de 2026, aproximadamente a las 04:40 AM (Salida forzada).
Involucrados: Personal de seguridad del hotel y el empleado identificado como Luis David.
Descripción de los hechos:
Deseo interponer una denuncia formal por el trato violento y las irregularidades sufridas durante mi estancia. Fui abordado por el personal de seguridad del hotel de manera agresiva, quienes mediante fuerza física excesiva me provocaron múltiples hematomas en brazos, muñecas y espalda, además de laceraciones en el pie. Adjunto evidencia fotográfica de dichas lesiones como prueba del uso desmedido de la fuerza.
Fui entregado a las autoridades y trasladado a la Fiscalía de Bávaro. Durante este proceso, un empleado del hotel identificado como Luis David exigió y recibió de mi acompañante la suma de 300 USD en efectivo para permitir mi liberación, alegando un daño a una pantalla que nunca fue comprobado ni mostrado. Esta transacción ocurrió de manera irregular y bajo coacción.
Posteriormente, el hotel obligó a mi acompañante a firmar un documento de “Salida Anticipada” mientras yo me encontraba detenido, impidiéndome el reingreso incluso para retirar mis pertenencias personalmente. El costo total de la afectación económica, incluyendo pagos realizados en la zona de Bávaro y la reserva no disfrutada, asciende a 1,850 USD.
Solicitud:
Solicito a POLITUR que inicie una investigación sobre los protocolos de seguridad de este establecimiento y la conducta del empleado Luis David, ya que estas prácticas de extorsión y violencia física atentan contra la seguridad del turista y la imagen de la República Dominicana.
Tengo las evidencias fotográficas, recibos de pago y grabaciones de los funcionarios de POLITUR solicitando la suma de 2000 dólares para mi liberación.