Police Policija |
|
---|---|
Emblem of Policija
|
|
Agency overview | |
Formed | 1990 |
Preceding agency | Milicija (SFRY) |
Legal personality | Governmental: Government agency |
Jurisdictional structure | |
National agency | HR |
Governing body | Ministry of the Interior (Croatia) |
General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | Zagreb, Ulica grada Vukovara 33 |
Minister responsible | Vlaho Orepić, Minister of Internal Affairs |
Agency executive | Vlado Dominić, General Police Director |
Police Administrations | 20 |
Facilities | |
Airbases | Lučko (LDZL) |
Helicopter - special forces, utility, SARs | 1 x Agusta-Bell 212 Twin Huey |
Helicopter - border patrols | 2 x AgustaWestland AW139 |
Helicopter - border patrol, traffic control, air ambulances | 2 x Eurocopter EC135 P2+ |
Website | |
www.policija.hr |
Law enforcement in Croatia is the responsibility of the Police (Croatian: Policija), which is a public service of the Ministry of the Interior of the Republic of Croatia, carrying out certain tasks, the so-called, police activities, laid down by law.
The Police deals with the following affairs: protection of individual life, rights, security and integrity, protection of property, prevention and detection of criminal offences, misdemeanors, violations, search for perpetrators of criminal offences, misdemeanors, violations and their bringing before competent authorities, control and management of road traffic, conducting affairs with aliens, control and security of state border, and other affairs defined by law.
In the operative sense, police affairs are divided into affairs related to public peace and order, affairs related to security of public gatherings, affairs of the border police, affairs of safety of road traffic, affairs of counter-explosive protection, affairs of the criminal police, crime-technical affairs, crime-files affairs, administrative affairs, nationality-related affairs, status questions and asylum, affairs of protection and rescue, inspection affairs and technical affairs.
In recent years, the force has been undergoing a reform with assistance from international agencies, including the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe since OSCE Mission to Croatia began there on 18 April 1996, with Croatia being admitted to OSCE on March 24, 1992.
Police officers' powers in order to maintain peace in Croatia, such as the power to stop and search, seize property and use force, are regulated. A police officer in Croatia may only stop and search a person if a court has issued a warrant and it is possible that this person has broken the law or is in possession of items or tools which are considered unlawful.
A police officer is only allowed to use firearms if there is an immediate threat to his own life or the lives of other people, to prevent a crime from being committed for which the minimum prison sentence is five years or more, or to prevent the escape of a prisoner caught committing an offence for which the prison sentence is a maximum of ten years.