Macedonian Police Полиција |
|||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Patch of the Macedonian Police
|
|||||||
Agency overview | |||||||
Formed | 1992 | ||||||
Legal personality | Governmental: Government agency | ||||||
Jurisdictional structure | |||||||
National agency | Republic of Macedonia | ||||||
Primary governing body | Government of Macedonia | ||||||
Secondary governing body | Ministry of Internal Affairs (Macedonia) | ||||||
General nature | |||||||
Operational structure | |||||||
Headquarters | Skopje | ||||||
Minister responsible | Oliver Spasovski, Minister of Internal Affairs | ||||||
Agency executive | Violeta Jankovska, State Secretary of the MIA | ||||||
Parent agency | Government of Macedonia | ||||||
Child agency | Administration for Security and Counterintelligence | ||||||
Facilities | |||||||
Stations | Skopje, Kumanovo, Shtip, Strumica, Bitola, Ohrid and Tetovo | ||||||
Light Vehicles | Chevrolet Spark 100 | ||||||
Scoters | Sym HD2 200i, Piaggio Beverly 125 |
||||||
Helicopters | agusta AB206B-2 (1), agusta ab212 (1), bell 412ep (1), mil Mi-171 (1), mil Mi-17V-5 (1) | ||||||
Dogs | German Sheppard | ||||||
|
|||||||
Website | |||||||
www.mvr.gov.mk |
Notables | |
---|---|
Anniversary | May 7th |
Award | Constantinus 2013 Silver Medal |
Law enforcement in the Republic of Macedonia is the responsibility of the Police of the Republic of Macedonia.
The Macedonian Police headquarters is located in Skopje at the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and it also maintains an air base in nearby Idrizovo. Taiwan, Canada and Italy have all contributed Bell Helicopter Textron helicopters to the police force's Macedonian Police Aviation Unit in cooperation with the Macedonian Air Force to help combat insurgency in Northern Macedonia.
The law enforcement agencies of Macedonia are regulated by the Macedonian Constitution of 1991, the Law on Internal Affairs of 1995, the Criminal Procedure Code of 1997 and the Draft Law on Changes and Additions to the Criminal Procedure Code. With police actions and behaviour controlled by the Criminal Procedure Code, and the Law on Internal Affairs controlling the use of firearms by the police force. On July 1, 2003 the Law on the Police Academy was enacted, creating the Republic of Macedonia premiere police academy to train civil and border police officers.
The force has been the subject of a number of recent reforms regarding both the Albanian insurgency, and possible violations of human rights, with NATO officials stating that the force was "not really up to European standards"
The Police of the Republic of Macedonia work closely with the NATO peacekeepers in patrolling areas with high numbers of ethnic Albanians ever since the 2001 Macedonia conflict ended, and have been receiving weapons from surrendering Albanian insurgents. Violent attacks, however, still occur as in 2001 three officers were killed by Albanian gunmen.
The Macedonian Police were also subject to scrutiny during Albanian riots on 9 July 1997 when protesters collected in the western town of Gostivar. Over 200 were wounded and three killed (two shot, one beaten to death) in a resulting clash with police riot squads, and the Humans Rights Watch investigated allegations of police brutality. These events underlined a continuing friction between the Macedonian Police force and Albanians living in the Republic of Macedonia. The International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights reported that police abuse of suspects, particularly during initial arrest and detention, and police harassment of ethnic minorities is ongoing.