Law enforcement in Mongolia
The Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs is the sole organ of national security in Mongolia. The primary force is responsible for maintaining law and order and preventing crime throughout the country is the National Police Agency, created in 1965 and headquartered in the capital Ulaanbaatar.[1] Interpol has an office within the Mongolian Police.[1]
Police agency
Law enforcement forces in the socialist
Internal troops
The Internal Troops are the paramilitary gendarmerie law enforcement agency and the reserve forces of the Mongolian Armed Forces. It serves as a riot police and a special purpose unit that guards important government buildings such as the Mongolian National Broadcaster and Altan-Ölgii National Cemetery. The Internal Troops in its current form was established in February 2014.[7][8][9]
Border police
The
Duties
The mandate of police is to implement state policy on crime fighting and maintaining public order, to carry out police duties throughout Mongolia and manage services provided at local level, to develop policy on firearms (shooting techniques, special equipment, and associated needs) and on human resources, training and methods for improving knowledge and skills, protecting the rights and legal interests of police officers, organizing police work in keeping with
References
- ^ a b c "Mongolia". 12 June 2013. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
- ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | Mongolia: Structure of the police; how a complaint about a police officer would be handled by the police (1997-September 1999)". Refworld.
- ^ "Law on police use of force in Mongolia".
- ISBN 9050954499.
- ^ "Mongolian police officers complete OSCE-supported course on trends and tendencies of organized crime, with focus on trafficking in human beings | OSCE". www.osce.org.
- ^ "Mongolia should strengthen its institutions and guarantee their independence in the fight against corruption - OECD". www.oecd.org.
- ^ "Mongolia likely to re-establish Internal Troops - News.MN". News.MN - The source of news. January 3, 2017.
- ^ "Internal troops reinstated by Parliament". MONTSAME News Agency.
- ISBN 9781538102275– via Google Books.