
ArmInfo. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan participated in the activation ceremony of the country's Ministry of Internal Affairs' Police Guard.
According to the government press service, Pashinyan, accompanied by Interior Minister Arpine Sargsyan, inspected the Police Guard's technical equipment and new weapons that meet international standards. "Today we are laying the foundation of an entirely new service, and this is an important point. In other words, we are not transforming the police forces into a police guard; today we have created a police guard. Of course, the path and history we have traveled remain with us, and they are valuable to us, but starting today, we are opening a new page in history and expect the police guard to become a qualitatively new service for the Republic of Armenia, its citizens, and the servicemen themselves. And, of course, this is an important stage in the reform of the police and the system of the Ministry of Internal Affairs," Pashinyan said, addressing the guard's officers.
The police guard, one of the four main areas of police activity, will contribute to strengthening Armenia's internal security system through a more targeted set of tools. With new weapons and trained personnel that meet international standards, the police guard will be responsible for maintaining public order and ensuring public safety. The police guard will function as a fully-fledged structure, not being the legal successor to any police department. The main tasks of the Police Guard are: maintaining public order and ensuring public safety, protecting critical facilities subject to state protection, ensuring the safety of special cargo transportation, enforcing the legal regime during martial law and states of emergency, participating in the protection of the population in emergency situations, assisting in ensuring the safety of persons subject to special state protection, and assisting criminal justice agencies.
"With the establishment of the Police Guard, a new standard for the use of force will come into force for the first time, consistent with international standards, including the cases, grounds, and conditions for the proportionality of the use of physical force, special means, firearms, and special equipment," the government stated.