|
Provođenje zakona na Kubi je u nadležnosti Nacionalne revolucionarne
policije (Španjolski: Policía Nacional Revolucionaria,
PNR) koja je podređena Ministarstvu unutarnjih poslova. Kako za vojsku,
tako i za policiju postoji vojna obaveza za sve kubanske državljane
starije od 16 godina (ne mogu birati da li će ići u policiju ili
vojsku). |
Stopa
kriminala na Kubi je značajno manja nego u drugim državama okruženja,
pogotovo u glavnom gradu Havani. Policiju kontrolira Ministarstvo koje
je odgovorno Državnom vijeću. Ministarstvo je podijeljeno u tri
pododjela: Sigurnost, Tehničke operacije i Unutarnji red. Ovi zadnji su
podijeljeni na pravosudnu policiju, vatrogasce i policiju. Nacionalna
revolucionarna policija je nadležna za policajce u uniformi,
kriminalističke istrage, prevenciju kriminala, maloljetnički kriminal te
kontrolu prometa. Svaka od četrnaest kubanskih provincija ima svojeg
šefa policije koji odgovara centrali u Havani. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
VISOR CAP BADGE |
SLEEVE PATCH |
|
Oznaka za šapke |
Oznaka za rukav |
|
|
|
|
Law enforcement in Cuba is the responsibility of the National
Revolutionary Police Force (Spanish: Policía Nacional
Revolucionaria, PNR) under the administration of the Cuban
Ministry of the Interior. Conscription into either the armed forces or
the national police force is compulsory for those over the age of 16.
Nevertheless, conscripts have no choice to which service they are
assigned. |
Crime rates in Cuba remain significantly lower than many other major
cities worldwide, with Cuban police acting strongly against any crime,
particularly in Havana. As with many countries, the PNR is under the
control of the Ministry of the Interior, which reports to the State
Council. The Ministry of the Interior is divided into three divisions:
Security, Technical Operations, and Internal Order and Crime Prevention.
The last is divided into corrections, fire protection, and policing. The
PNR reports to this subdirectorate, and is responsible for uniform
policing, criminal investigation, crime prevention, juvenile deliquency,
and traffic control. The PNR conducts these activities across the 14
provinces of Cuba, each of which has its own police chief who reports to
a central PNR command in Havana. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
ON TOP
NA VRH |
|