Special Suppressive Antiterrorist Unit (Greece)
The Special Suppressive Antiterrorist Unit (Greek: Ε.Κ.Α.Μ. - Ειδική Κατασταλτική Αντιτρομοκρατική Μονάδα, Eidiki Katastaltiki Antitromokratiki Monada) is the Greek counter-terrorism unit of the Hellenic Police. It is the most distinguished part of the Hellenic Police. It was formed in 1978 when two counter-terrorist units were created within the two police divisions that existed then (Hellenic Gendarmerie and the Cities Police), which were united into a single body in 1984, the Hellenic Police. In the beginning the Unit had only 150 men, but when Greece became the host country of the 2004 Summer Olympics their number increased to 200 after reassessing the needs for the magnitude of the event.
Special Suppressive Antiterrorist Unit Ειδική Κατασταλτική Αντιτρομοκρατική Μονάδα Eidiki Katastaltiki Antitromokratiki Monada | |
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Abbreviation | EKAM |
Agency overview | |
Formed | 1978 |
Employees | 200 operators |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Operations jurisdiction | Greece |
General nature | |
Specialist jurisdiction |
|
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | Athens |
Parent agency | Hellenic Police |
Training
The EKAM force is based in Athens, but have several detachments spread throughout Greece's major cities. Each officer is a full-time member who must have at least five years on the force before being allowed to try out. Many receive training from the Greek Army's Ranger School before going on to the police counter-terrorism school.[1]
The Special Suppressive Antiterrorist Unit of the Hellenic Police follows a three-month training program every year. For its training modern, purpose-built facilities are being used. Training can also take place in other locations such as buildings in urban or rural areas (inhabited or not), the Athens International Airport, planes of Olympic Airways, the Piraeus port infrastructure, the Hellenic Railroad system, the Athens Metro. Other places that have been decided as suitable to cover its training needs can also be used. The Unit is in constant cooperation with other Special Units abroad such as the FBI, SAS and ERU via the ATLAS Network.[2]
Operations
The Special Suppressive Antiterrorist Unit of the Hellenic Police, operates all around Greece and abroad whenever is deemed necessary. It has confronted challenges such as hostage situations and it has contributed in the arrests of many dangerous criminals. The EKAM played a key role in the dismantling of the November 17 and Revolutionary People's Struggle terrorist organizations. In March 2003, it confronted successfully an incident on a Turkish Aeroplane which was hijacked while it flew from Istanbul to Ankara (flight no. 160) and ended up at the Athens International Airport at the order of the hijacker. In a successful operation the Unit stormed the plane and arrested the hijacker by incapacitating him with a taser[3] and releasing all hostages safely.[4]
Duties
- Hostage situation response
- High risk arrests
- High risk VIP's escort
- W.M.D (Weapons of mass destruction) (C.B.R.N) hostage situation, intrusion response
- Special antiterrorism operations and operations against organized crime in collaboration with the Hellenic Security Forces
- Rescue operations including physical disasters in cooperation with the Fire Brigade
Equipment
Pistols
Submachine Guns
- Heckler & Koch MP5 9×19mm Parabellum. Versions used: MP5A3, MP5A4, MP5A5, MP5SD, MP5k and MP5k2[5]
- Heckler & Koch UMP
- FN Herstal P90 FN 5.7×28mm[5]
- FN Herstal Uzi 9×19mm Parabellum[5]
Assault Rifles
Machine Guns
- FN Herstal MAG 7,62×51mm[5]
Sniper Rifles
- Heckler & Koch G3SG/1 7,62×51mm with Carl Zeiss 10x42 scope[5]
- Accuracy International Arctic Warfare with both 7,62×51mm and .338 Lapua Magnum with mounted Schmidt and Bender 3-12x50 scopes[5]
- Knight's Armament Company SR-25 Stoner 7,62×51mm with mounted Leupold 3-12x50 scopes[5]
- Kefefs Version P is used
All the above sniper rifles can also be equipped with a special nightvision device.
Trivia
Outside international conventions the Greek name for the unit is Special Suppressive Antiterrorist Unit. At the time of its creation in the late 1970s, counter-terrorist units were conceived to be the assault teams deployed as a last resort against hostage situations. Hence the "suppression" designation used as a euphemism indicating a terminal engagement against terrorists .
References
- ::Rieas:: - Greek Special Forces Outlook
- Marsden, Chris. "European Union cites Boston attack to justify major anti-terrorist operation". 24 April 2013. International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI). Retrieved 4 May 2014.
- "TASER International, Inc. commends Greek Police Special Forces on use of ADVANCED TASER M26 to arrest Turkish Airlines Flight 160 hijacker". TASER International. Retrieved 2007-06-09.
- "Turkish Aeroplane hijacked". BBC News. BBC. 2003-03-29.
- "Greece Ministry of Public Order Press Office: Special Anti-Terrorist Unit" (PDF). http://astynomia.gr - Official Website of the Hellenic Police. July 2004. Retrieved 2009-10-13. External link in
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