Министерство внутренних дел по Чеченской Республик Chechen Republic's Interior Ministry |
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Abbreviation | МВД по ЧР |
Motto |
служа закону, Служим народу by serving the law, we serve the people |
Agency overview | |
Formed | 1991 |
Employees | 9,000 |
Legal personality | Governmental: Government agency |
Jurisdictional structure | |
General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | 21 Isaev Prospect, Grozny |
Agency executive | Ruslan Alkhanov, Interior Minister |
Parent agency | MVD |
Website | |
Official Site |
Ministry for Internal Affairs of Chechnya (Министерство внутренних дел по Чеченской Республик) is the official name of Chechnya's police. The Ministry is subordinated directly to the Russian Interior Ministry and the President of Chechnya.
The Main Headquarters is in Grozny, Chechen Republic, Russia.
The Chechen police was formed in November 1917 when the first proletarian militia forces were established.
In November 1920, the Congress of Terek region was proclaimed the Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, and the first People's Commissar of Internal Affairs (MVD) was Idris Zyazikov. The police force was renamed General Directorate of Police.
At the beginning of World War II, many police officers voluntarily went to the front. The fight against crime, especially in the first month of the war, was complicated by large crowds of people arriving from areas near the front in railway stations Grozny, Gudermes and other places. During the war, the police monitored the observance of blackouts, strengthened the passport regime, and caught deserters and enemy spies.
In the postwar period, in the 1960s, the policing activities of all police services (criminal investigation, the administrative divisions of the service, traffic police, etc.) had increased. There was a new system for the protection of public order in a single dislocation, increasing the contribution to the protection of public order, making the night police and police mobile group. Organizing and coordinating the role of the operational-duty unit increased with the creation of mobile police teams. The effectiveness of the disclosure of crimes to a great extent dependended on the precise exchange of information on organized crime, suspects, and stolen merchandise.