Pengguna:BukanTeamBiasa/Kotak pasir/Penguatkuasaan undang-undang di Austria

Daripada Wikipedia, ensiklopedia bebas.

Law enforcement in Austria is the responsibility of the Directorate General for Public Security, a subdivision of the Federal Ministry of the Interior located at Herrengasse 7 in Vienna. Over 20,000 police officers are on duty in the Federal Police at more than 1,000 police stations. On lakes and rivers the federal police has over 70 boats and other craft to act as the Water police.

An Austrian Police vehicle

The phone number 059133 connects you to the nearest police station anywhere in Austria. The emergency number is 133.

Standard patrol vehicle of the military police

Law enforcement agencies[sunting | sunting sumber]

Federal[sunting | sunting sumber]

Ministry of Defence[sunting | sunting sumber]

Car of the Financial Guard

Ministry of Finance[sunting | sunting sumber]

  • Finanzpolizei: Financial Guard
  • Operative Zollaufsicht (OZA): Customs Service
Armoured vehicle 'Sonderwagen 4 of the Federal Police

Federal Ministry of the Interior[sunting | sunting sumber]

Standard vehicle of the Justizwache
    • Flugpolizei: Air Police
    • Sondereinheit für Observation (SEO): Special Unit for Covered Technical Surveillance

Ministry of Justice[sunting | sunting sumber]

  • Justizwache (JW): Penitentiary Police
    • Justizwache Einsatzgruppe (JEG): SWAT Team of Penitentiary Police

State[sunting | sunting sumber]

In general, there are no state law enforcement offices for public safety permitted, only on the federal and municipal level of administration by the Austrian Constitution, only for their sphere of authority like the states´ conservation and wildlife protection.

Municipalities[sunting | sunting sumber]

  • Stadtpolizei: Municipal police, in 21 municipalities
  • Ordnungsamt: An arm of the municipal government tasked with enforcing municipal ordinances. In cities with their own municipal police forces, the municipal police doubles as the Ordnungsamt. As of 2018, there are Ordnungsämter in six communities. In two of these, the Ordnungsamt is conventionally called Ordnungswache; in one of them, Mobile Überwachungsgruppe. The difference in terminology has no legal significance.
  • Ordnungsdienst: An Ordnungsamt that is technically a private corporation (held by the municipality) as opposed to a department of the municipal government. As of 2018, there is exactly one Ordnungsdienst in Austria, in the city of Linz.
  • Straßenaufsicht: Municipal traffic enforcement

Requirements of Police Officers[sunting | sunting sumber]

Police officers in Austria must meet certain requirements. These requirements include being at least 18 years of age, Austrian citizenship, an ability to act (not burdened by physical disability), impeccable reputation, Class B driver's licence, if conscripted to the armed forces, to have completed that conscription, and a swimming badge to prove swimming ability.[1]

See also[sunting | sunting sumber]

References[sunting | sunting sumber]

External links[sunting | sunting sumber]

Templat:Law enforcement in Austria Templat:Austria topics


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