Altai Krai Police

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Main Directorate for Internal Affairs of Altai Krai
ГУ МВД России по Алтайскому краю
Official Emblem of the Altai Police.jpg
AbbreviationГУ МВД России по АК
MottoСлужа закону, служим народу
By serving the law, we serve the people
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionRUS
Governing bodyMVD
General nature
  • Local civilian police
Operational structure
Agency executive
  • Aleksander Laas, Head of Police
Parent agencyMVD
Child agency
  • Politsiya
Website
Official Website

The Main Directorate for Internal Affairs of Altai Krai (Russian: Главного управления Министерства внутренних дел Российской Федерации по Алтайскому краю) or the Altai Krai Police, is the main law enforcement agency in the Government of Altai Krai in Southern Russia.

The central headquarters is in Barnaul.

History[]

The Altai Police was formed by decree in 1782.

In May 1785, the head of police was Ivan Tersky, who led the policing reform in 1785–1787. In those years a mountain battalion of the Barnaul Police was formed.

Until 1919 the Barnaul Police was the central law enforcement in Altai Krai. In 1919 the Czarist police was renamed as the People's and Workers' Militia. In 1920, the police was a part of local NKVD and they took part in the repression of dissidents. During the second half of 1937, 13,534 people were arrested, with 7,437 of them sentenced to death by shooting.

After World War II and during the Cold War, the police suffered extensive cuts and major reforms.

In 1991, the Ministry for Internal Affairs of Altai was established as main policing body, with Felix Trotsenko as its first minister. After a few years the Ministry become Main Directorate. In 1992 the Directorate against Organized Crime (GUBOP) was created to deal with this growing problem. Under the new ministry were formed the police special forces: Special unit for rapid reaction (SOBR), and the OMON units in Barnaul and Biisk.

Since September 2005 the headmaster of the police is Lieutenant-General Alexander Oldak. The police is divided into 72 regional and municipal departments. In 2006 the aviation detachment for special purposes was formed, having armed with Mi-8AMT.

The police car fleet was only updated in 2007, at the expense of regional and federal budgets, with the police purchasing more than 100 cars and buses.

On May 13, 2013, Alexander Laas was appointed by the Federal Minister for Internal Affairs as new head of the Altai Krai Police.

Structure[]

  • Central Investigation Department
  • Department of organization of the Spetsnaz
  • Directorate for public order
  • Zonal dog service center
  • Department for records and mode
  • Center for licenses and permits
  • Department of inquiry
  • Department for regional departments
  • Office for Combating Economic Crimes
  • Directorate for private security
  • Office of the Traffic Police (GAI)
  • The Personnel Office
  • Department of Internal Security
  • The Center for Combating offenses in the consumer market and the implementation of administrative law
  • Forensic Center
  • Audit Division
  • Center for Information Technology, Communications and Information Protection (TsITSiZI)

Band of the Altai Krai Police[]

The police band of the Cultural Center of the Altai Krai Police was first organized in May 1999. At that time, members of the military band of the Barnaul Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots formed the basis of the ensemble. It was originally under the direction Captain Ivan Sursyakov. In 2002, the band toured the entire Altai Krai with a concert program dedicated to the 200th anniversary of the Russian MVD. In 2003, the band was attached to the Cultural Centre and has since 2007 been directed by Vladimir Lozin. In 2012, the band won the "Silver Tunes of Fanfares" festival of Russian law enforcement agencies in Seversk.[1]

References[]

External links[]

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