Counter-Terrorist Unit (Serbia) Explained

Agencyname:Counter-Terrorist Unit
Nativename:Противтерористичка јединица
Nativenamea:Protivteroristička jedinica
Abbreviation:PTJ
Logocaption:Emblem of Counter-Terrorist Unit
Formedyear:7 March 2003
Preceding1:JSO
Dissolved:2016
Superseding:SAJ
Employees:215 [1]
Country:Serbia
Legaljuris:Domestic anti-terrorism and law enforcement
Governingbody:Ministry of Internal Affairs (Serbia)
Headquarters:Lipovica
Chief1position:Commandeer
Unittype:police tactical unit

The Counter-Terrorist Unit (Serbian: Противтерористичка јединица / Protivteroristička jedinica, abbr. ПTJ / PTJ) was a police tactical unit of the Serbian Police.[2] [3] The PTJ was initially established within the Gendarmery of the Police and in April 2007 was made an independent unit within the Police Directorate of the Police.

As its name states, the PTJ was oriented towards anti-terror operations as well as securing and maintaining the internal security of Serbia. Often only used in operations deemed too dangerous for other police units, it was highly trained and equipped. The PTJ's responsibilities included: resolving hostage situations, anti-terrorist operations, high-profile arrests and bomb disposal. Members of the PTJ operate with extreme professionalism and devotion to their responsibilities. This has earned the PTJ the great respect throughout the world as an elite special operations police unit among other such units.

History

In 2016, the unit was disbanded and most of its members were incorporated into the Special Anti-Terrorist Unit (SAJ).[4]

Equipment and training

Candidates were selected from the Žandarmerija, who underwent rigorous physical evaluations before tactical training could begun. Lieutenant Colonel Dragović, the commander, stated in 2007 that out of 150 candidates only eight were selected in that year.[5] Members of the PTJ were expected to meet and excel the criteria set before them. Trainees were exposed to varying conditions that they might find in real life operations. PTJ training centres were located at Petrovo Selo near Kula and Goč near Vrnjačka Banja.

Weapons used include:[5]

Publicly known operations

In 13 operations across eight cities in Serbia, the PTJ arrested numerous members of the so-called "Customs Mafia". They detained known organized crime leaders such as Sreten Jocić from the Netherlands; Dejan Milenković from Greece; Ridvan Rašitija from Switzerland; and extradited Abdelmajid Bouchar, (a member of "Al-Qaeda" suspected in connection with the 2004 Madrid train bombings), to Spain.[6]

Others:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Novi odred Žandarmerije sličan JSO. 4 December 2017. b92.net. 24 January 2012. Serbian.
  2. Web site: Istorijat - Protivteroristička jedinica. Archive - Ministry of Interior . 14 October 2019 . Serbian . 2009.
  3. Web site: Counter Terrorist Unit (CTU) . Specijalne-jedinice.com . 13 October 2019 . 12 August 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200812062004/https://specijalne-jedinice.com/Srbija/PTJ-English.html#sthash.yB654Pqc.dpbs . dead .
  4. News: САЈ и ПТЈ се спајају у јединицу суперспецијалаца . 13 October 2019 . Dnevnik . 7 February 2016 . sr.
  5. http://www.novosti.rs/code/navigate.php?Id=9&status=jedna&vest=98333&datum=2007-01-05 Crvene beretke prošle proveru
  6. http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/08/26/spain.extradition/index.html Spain seeks 3/11 suspect in Serbia
  7. http://www.blic.rs/temadana.php?id=2042&pid=153&results=true Ubijen vehabija, ranjen policajac
  8. http://www.b92.net/eng/news/crimes-article.php?mm=3&dd=29&yyyy=2009 Special police kill man holding family hostage