Milicja Obywatelska


The Milicja Obywatelska, known as the Citizens' Militia in English, was the national police organization of the Polish People's Republic.
The MO was established on 7 October 1944 by the Polish Committee of National Liberation under Chief Commander Franciszek Jóźwiak to police Red Army controlled areas of Poland during World War II. It became the official police force with the founding of the Polish People's Republic in 1947, effectively replacing the pre-war Policja as the main uniformed civilian police of Poland during the communist era. The MO was headquartered in Warsaw while training for the force was conducted in the town of Legionowo.
The MO was supported by two paramilitary formations: the elite Motorized Reserves of the Citizens' Militia and the reservist Volunteer Reserve of the Citizens' Militia. In most cases it represented a state-controlled force used to exert political repression, especially with its elite ZOMO squads. The MO continued to exist after the fall of communism in Poland in 1989 until it was transformed back into Policja on 10 May 1990.

History

The Citizens' Militia was created on the basis of provisions of the July Manifesto of the Soviet-backed Polish National Liberation Committee, State National Council. It was formally established by decree on 7 October 1944 during the later stages of the Eastern Front of World War II. Milicja had been adapted from the cognate term militsiya used in the Soviet Union, itself derived from militia with its etymology from the concept of a military force composed of ordinary citizens.
The MO was used to establish the authority of the PKWN in areas of Poland that came under control of the Red Army as it pushed through the country into Nazi Germany. The first generation officers and agents were drawn from the following groups and sectors of society: The MO was supplemented by about a thousand former policemen employed in 1945, mainly in positions requiring special qualifications.
In 1948, Poland's strengthened turn toward Stalinism brought the beginning of formalised totalitarian rule, "in which one Party ruled autonomously over all sections of society". Officers of the MO took the same solemn oath as the officers of the Security Service. Its main fragment read as follows:
The first chief commander of MO was Franciszek Jóźwiak.
The militia was then subordinated to Ministry of Public Security, and from 1955 to Ministry of Internal Affairs. From March 1946 to the end of the 1940s, local MO units with units of the Polish People's Army, Internal Security Corps, Ministry of Public Security and Border Protection were subordinated to provincial security committees subordinate to State Security Commission. In the years 1944–1948, the Citizens' Militia was used to fight "cursed soldiers", as well as servicemen of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and German Werwolf elements.

The decrees and the first organizational structure

When on July 27, 1944, the Civic Militia was established by one of the two decrees of the Polish Committee of National Liberation, in Rzeczpospolita - "press organ of the Polish Committee of National Liberation" - August 16 1944 was provided with:
Given the fact that the first generation officers and men of the MO were drawn partly from the armed force the MO sported military ranks, a tradition shared with the other Warsaw Pact police forces.

Rise of terrorism

Due to increasing terrorist threats, the MO created the Wydział Zabezpieczenia on February 22, 1976. This consisted of 47 officers assigned to five sections.
In 1982, the WZ had a unit that is on standby to conduct anti-hijacking operations and provide security on LOT Polish Airlines airplanes. The WZ would later be known as the Biuro Operacji Antyterrorystycznych after being reorganized.

Organisation

When the MO was first organized in 1945, it comprised the following:
  • Main Office
  • Political and Educational Board
  • Investigation Service Board
  • External Service Branch
  • Operational Battalion
  • Personnel Department
  • Finance and Economic Department
Until 1950, Poland was divided to 16 provinces. It was only from 1950-1975 when the country was divided to 17 provinces and five cities with voivodeship rights.
The MO had 20 municipal headquarters.
The Citizens' Militia was divided into a Public Order Department, Traffic Militia, Criminal Investigations, Investigations Militia and an Infrastructure Security Section.
The ZOMO motorized riot troops, which played the most visible role in quelling demonstrations in 1980 and 1981, were reduced in size somewhat by the early 1990s and renamed Preventive Units of the Citizens' Militia. OPMO forces are restricted to roles such as crowd control at sporting events, ensuring safety in natural disasters, and assisting the regular police. In theory, higher government authority would be required for large OPMO contingents to be used.
From the 1960s through the 1980s, ORMO forces, which at one time numbered as many as 600,000 civilian volunteers, were used to augment regular police personnel at key trouble spots. In the early 1980s, ORMO harassed Solidarity members and prevented independent groups from organizing. Largely staffed by industrial workers who gained substantial privileges by monitoring their peers in the workplace, ORMO was the object of extreme resentment throughout the 1980s. Kiszczak attempted to promote ORMO as a valuable auxiliary police force, but the organization was abolished by the Sejm in 1990.

Ranks and uniform

As a general rule, the MO wore grey and sky blue uniforms. The full dress variant of this was worn with the peaked cap, service dress was the same but the riot police wore combat helmets.
Rank CategoryCommissioned Officers Commissioned Officers English translation
General officersNo equivalentGeneral armiiGeneral
Director General
General officersNo equivalentGeneral broniLieutenant General
Commissioner General
General officersNo equivalentGenerał dywizjiMajor General
Inspector General
General officersGenerał brygady MO
Generał brygady MOPolice Brigadier
Commissioner
Field grade officersPułkownikPułkownikPolice Colonel
Commander
Detective Commander
Field grade officersPodpułkownikPodpułkownikPolice Lieutenant Colonel
Chief Superintendent
Detective Chief Superintendent
Field grade officersMajorMajorPolice Major
Superintendent
Detective Superintendent
Subaltern grade officersKapitanKapitanPolice Captain
Chief Inspector
Detective Chief Inspector
Subaltern grade officersPorucznikPorucznikPolice Lieutenant
Senior Inspector
Detective Senior Inspector
Subaltern grade officersPodporucznikPodporucznikPolice Second Lieutenant
Inspector
Detective Inspector
Subaltern grade officersChorąży
No equivalentPolice Ensign
Divisional Inspector
Detective Divisional Inspector

Rank CategoryNon-Commissioned Officers and basic agentsEnglish translation
Station inspectors and senior NCOs
Starszy chorąży sztabowySenior Station Inspector
Chief Warrant Officer
Station inspectors and senior NCOs
Chorąży sztabowyStation Inspector
Senior Warrant Officer
Station inspectors and senior NCOs
Starszy chorążySub-inspector first class
Master Warrant Officer
Station inspectors and senior NCOs
ChorążySub-inspector
First Warrant Officer
Station inspectors and senior NCOs
Młodszy chorążyAssistant sub-inspector
Second Warrant Officer
Police NCOsStarszy sierżant sztabowySergeant Major
Police NCOsSierżant sztabowyHead Constable
Master Sergeant
Police NCOsStarszy sierżantSergeant First Class
Police NCOsSierżantStaff Sergeant
Police NCOsPlutonowySergeant
Police NCOsStarszy kapralLance Corporal
Police NCOsKapralCorporal
ConstablesStarszy szeregowySenior Constable
Private First Class
ConstablesSzeregowyConstable
Private

Transportation

The most common types were: