HISTORIA POLSKICH FORMACJI POLICYJNYCH OD II WOJNY
ŚWIATOWEJ DO CZASÓW WSPÓŁCZESNYCH
HISTORIA POLSKICH FORMACJI POLICYJNYCH OD II WOJNY
ŚWIATOWEJ DO CZASÓW WSPÓŁCZESNYCH
Author(s): Andrzej Czop, Mariusz SokołowskiSubject(s): Security and defense
Published by: Wyższa Szkoła Bezpieczeństwa Publicznego i Indywidualnego “Apeiron” w Krakowie
Keywords: Police;World War II;the present;the development of police;
Summary/Abstract: This article presents the history of the Police of the Second World War to the present. In 1939, the police corps had about 30 thousand officers. At the beginning of the Second World War, during the September campaign, killed nearly two thousand policemen. About 12 thousand. officers were sent to the Soviet captivity. Nearly six thousand. of them were murdered in the spring of 1940, lies on the Polish War Cemetery in Miednoje, the world's largest necropolis police, which was opened and dedicated on September 2000. December 17, 1939, in the General Government appointed Polish Police (hereinafter sometimes dark blue), reporting to the German Order Police. Polish Underground State Police structures formed at Army Headquarters, and on 1 August 1944, at the outbreak of the Warsaw Uprising, the Polish authorities formally disbanded the Police. October 7, 1944 by the decree of the Polish Committee of National Liberation communist government established the Citizens Militia, which served as the beginning of the service of nearly 60 thousand officers. In 1952 Poland broke off all relations with Interpol, which established in 1923 as one of the 20 states. April 6, 1990, after the transformation, the Polish Parliament established the Police. Formation returned to pre-war roots and entered into international structures. September 27, 1990, Poland was again a member of Interpol, and December 23, 1991, she entered the International Police Association (IPA).
Journal: Kultura Bezpieczeństwa. Nauka-Praktyka-Refleksje
- Issue Year: 2013
- Issue No: 13
- Page Range: 28-47
- Page Count: 20
- Language: Polish