OMON

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The OMON insignia
The OMON insignia

OMON (Russian: Отряд милиции особого назначения; Otryad Militsii Osobogo Naznacheniya, "Special Purpose Detachment of Militsiya") is a generic name for the system of special units of militsiya within the Russian and earlier the Soviet, Ministerstvo Vnutrennih Del (MVD; Ministry of Internal Affairs). There is an OMON unit in every subnational entity of Russia. The units are utilized in emergencies such as high-risk arrests, hostage crises and riots, as well as in response to acts of terrorism. OMON are often accused of rash actions and excessive and indiscriminate use of force.

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OMON personnel in Red Square, Moscow.
OMON personnel in Red Square, Moscow.

The history of OMON starts in 1979, when the first group was founded in preparation for the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, to ensure that there was no terrorism or hostage crisis as in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich.

OMON system itself is the successor of that group and was founded in 1987. The OMON units were initially used to control and stop demonstrations and hooliganism but later became accustomed to a wider range of police operations (even street patrolling).

OMON's ceremonial headwear is black berets although there were significant changes in uniform and insignia. The group members use black face masks while on duty.

OMON has been accused of corruption and of taking bribes,[citation needed] including protection money, to improve their salaries. Since August 1999 they have also been accused of checking the identity papers of anybody who seems to be a foreigner in order to extract bribes.

There have also been allegations that the group appears to not always be under the full control of the government and often acts independently.[citation needed]

Government control is also questionable in Chechnya, where one source even claims that Russian artillery was shelling OMON members on purpose.

Anna Politkovskaya stated in August 2006 that the deputy commanding officer of OMON, Buvadi Dakiev, an old friend of her, whom she secretly met, urged her to stay in his secure location. He was afraid she would be killed because Ramzan Kadyrov, the Prime Minister of the Federal government Russian republic of Chechnya since March 2006, was very angry with her. Buvadi offered to have her taken to Grozny in an OMON car, but that struck her as even more risky. She would be a target for Chechen fighters. "Do they at least have guns in the house you are going to?" he asked. [1]

  • On January 20, 1991, OMON attacked Latvia's Interior Ministry during the Latvian independence movement, killing five people and injuring ten. Seven OMON members were subsequently found guilty by the Riga District Court and received suspended sentences.
  • During the summer of 1991, a number of hit-and-run attacks on border outposts of Lithuania were attributed to OMON. Some sources say that Mikhail Gorbachev had lost control of the unit.
  • OMON is active in the Second Chechen War. The group sustained heavy losses in this conflict. Almost every Russian city sends, on a regular basis, small units of police (often composed of OMON members) for tours of duty in Chechnya lasting several months. One group of 47 OMON members became known as the Perm OMON, since this was part of Perm's police. OMON member Sergei Udachin, 37, used a small camera to take snapshots of his group, and had used about half of the film before he and all but seven members of his group were killed or captured (and later killed). A Chechen fighter picked up the camera, and documented the Chechen side of the conflict including killed and captured Russians; eventually the images became public. During the conflict the OMON were also accused of raping and murdering civilians.
  • OMON members were used for counter-drug operations in Central Asia.
  • At the beginning of September 2004, OMON were involved in the Beslan hostage crisis.
  • On March 3, 2007, OMON members countered Saint Petersburg March of the Discontented.

Males between the ages of 22 and 30 who have completed their two-year military service can apply to join OMON. The selection procedure for OMON is tough, as is expected for a special forces unit. The application includes medical and psychological tests, and tests of speed and fitness. The initial training lasts for four months. The applicants are extensively trained in the use of different weaponry and close combat, and are also trained to follow orders at any cost. Special emphasis is put on urban combat and the entering and clearing of buildings. The training also includes legal training. The application procedure closes with a final test, where the applicant has to fight three to five trained members of OMON by hand wearing boxing gloves. Less than one in five applicants pass and are selected to join. Members of OMON are supposed to be extremely fit and experts in small arms and hand-to-hand combat.

Information from different sources suggests that there were between 5,500 and 9,000 OMON members stationed at population centers and transportation hubs around the country in the 1990s.

Members receive a comparatively small salary of about $400 per month. Most members retire at the age of approximately 45 years, and receive practically no financial aid from the state afterwards. Due to the use of OMON members in high risk situations, especially in Chechnya, the group often loses members in combat.

The OMON groups use a wide range of weapons, including but not limited to the following list:

OMON vehicles include specially-equipped buses and trucks of different types, as well as limited number of armoured personnel carriers.

OMON units in Chechen war may also use other weaponry typical for a light infantry, such as a GP-25 underbarrel grenade launcher for AK-47.

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