National Intervention Unit

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National Intervention Unit
National Intervention Unit Operational Badge.png
National Intervention Unit Operational Badge
Active2000 – present
Country Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa
Agency South African Police Service
RoleMedium to high risk law enforcement
Part ofDivision Operational Response Services
AbbreviationNIU
Structure
OfficersApprox. 280-330
Stations
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Brigadier ME Tsiloane

The National Intervention Unit (NIU) is part of the special operations element of the South African Police Service (SAPS).

Contents

The National Intervention Unit is one of the SAPS' elite units. It was established in 2000 to address high-risk operations and assist the Special Task Force as it was faced with an increased workload and limited resources. The NIU provides operational support for the Special Task Force with counter terrorism and insurgency and hostage rescue.

Mission

To stabilise volatile situations by combating serious and violent crimes, the policing of high-risk public violence, rendering specialised operational support to provinces/units/divisions of South Africa.

Purpose

The NIU render a specialised operational support function focused on planned, intelligence-driven and targeted deployments to address specific incidents of crime and public violence, and not day-to-day crowd management operations. [1]

Function overview

Primary functions

In situations where other South African Police Service units, sections, or stations are not trained and equipped to deal with dangerous situations, the Intervention Units will take over, contain and conduct follow-up operations of incidents of serious violent crimes such as, but not limited to:

The rendering of specialized operational support:

Secondary functions

Deployment

Divisional Instruction: Establishing and Functioning of National Intervention Units, 20 FeNational Read more: https://briefly.co.za/south-africa/169430-2-people-killed-zimbali-police-sting-operation-linked-richards-bay/bruary 2010.

History

The National Intervention Unit can trace its origins to the Reaction Units which were established in the Riot Units in 1979. In 2000, the Division: Operational Response Services decided to standardize training and techniques for these units and formed the National High Risk Policing Capability. Four units were strategically placed at Pretoria, Durban, Mthatha and Cape Town.

These units participate in intelligence-driven operations to combat crime in the service areas of police stations and are responsible for stabilizing tense situations when normal policing is insufficient, such as intervening at incidents of public violence when Public Order Policing (POP) Units can no longer handle the situation.

Their work also includes the combating of serious and violent crime incidents such as cash-in-transit heists, ATM bombings, [3] armed robberies and urban terrorism. [4]

Recruitment and training

Prospective members have to be at least 21 years old and must have served at least two years in the South African Police Service. The volunteer must also show certain traits such as:

Applicants for a career in the NIU must be:

Phobia testing

Successfully complete a pre-selection programme

Prospective candidates who volunteer must undergo and successfully complete a pre-selection programme which includes psychometric evaluations before they will progress to an individual endurance programme.

The 69-hour individual endurance programme assesses the individual's attributes which includes:

Prospective members applying to join NIU Units must follow the appropriate career paths starting at the Public Order Policing Unit, and then proceed to the Tactical Response Unit before they can join the National Intervention Unit. Members who wish to grow their careers further may then join the South African Police Service Special Task Force (SAPS STF). [5]

All National Intervention applicants are volunteers and have to comply with stringent physical requirements before being admitted to the basic training and selection course. The volunteer must also show certain personal traits such as maturity, leadership skills, and sound judgment.

The basic training course includes weapons, rural and urban combat training courses. Compulsory advanced courses include special skills such as diving, VIP protection, explosives and medical training.

Although membership of the National Intervention Unit is open to both male and female SAPS members, female operatives undergo a separate selection course.

Current

The National Intervention Unit is actively involved in anti-rhino poaching operations in South Africa, [6] stabilizing industrial and mining unrest [7] as well as intervening in situations involving political violence. [8]

The National Intervention Unit, as a part of the operational response services division - along with Public Order Policing units, the Special Task force, the Tactical Response Teams and the air-wing - were a central part of the police strategy that resulted in the Marikana Massacre. [9] Their operational commander at Marikana, Lieutenant Colonel Kaizer Modiba, testified before the Farlam Commission of inquiry into the massacre in which he was shown to have ordered his officers to immediately sweep the nearby hill for more weapons rather than seeing to the injuries of the miners who had just been shot. This was "criticised because most NIU members had level-three first aid qualifications as part of their NIU training... According to the police service's official crime scene policy, the first member at the crime scene “with due consideration of the integrity of physical evidence, must assist the injured within the limitation of his or her training as a matter of priority”." [10] When questioned, Modiba could not recall that he had read the police's crime scene policy. [11] [12]

The National Intervention Unit, as a part of the Formed Police Unit / African Standby Force (ASF) for SADC (Southern African Development Community) is conducting operations in Lesotho attempting to restore peace, stability and democracy. [13]

Equipment

NamePhotoTypeOriginNotes
Beretta Px4 Storm PX4Storm.jpg Semi-Automatic Pistol Flag of Italy.svg  Italy The Beretta Px4 Storm Type F model is used.
Heckler & Koch UMP HKUMP45.JPG Submachine gun Flag of Germany.svg  Germany The UMP9 model is used with Optical Sights, Tactical Light & Laser sights
R5 Assault Rifle Vektor LM5 Feb 2008.jpg Assault Rifle Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa Standard Assault Rifle of the South African Police and the post-1994 South African Police Service. NIU uses various optical sights.
R1 Assault Rifle FN-FAL belgian.jpeg Assault Rifle Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa/Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium An automatic, folding stock R1 Assault rifle.
Republican Arms Musler 12 gauge shotgun Shotgun Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa
Stun Grenade Distraction device IMG 3610.jpg Stun grenade Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom
Smoke Grenade US Marines 100520-M-9232S-012 M18 green smoke grenade crop.jpg Smoke grenade Flag of the United States.svg  United States

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References

  1. "South African Police Training Overview" (PDF). marikanacomm.org.za. South African Police Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 October 2014. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  2. AL J, Venter (2010). Barrel of A Gun. Casemate Publishers. p. 485. ISBN   978-1-935149-25-5.
  3. Dagada, Rabelani (7 October 2014). "Local banks fight back". itweb. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  4. sapsjournalonline.gov.za
  5. saps.gov.za
  6. thepost.co.za
  7. leadershiponline.co.za
  8. saps.gov.za
  9. "Marikana: Photos a product of police chaos". 9 November 2012.
  10. "Top cop 'walked past' shot Marikana miners". 12 June 2014.
  11. "Marikana: Top police commander clueless on police policy". 10 June 2014.
  12. "Top cop 'walked past' shot Marikana miners". 12 June 2014.
  13. Sello, Lenyaro (3 September 2014). "SAPS in Lesotho to calm tensions". enca. Retrieved 8 October 2014.