Croatian Coast Guard

Coast Guard Of Croatia
Obalna straža Republike Hrvatske
Emblem
Racing stripe
Ensign
Agency overview
Formed1 November 2007
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdiction Croatia
Constituting instrument
  • Coast Guard Act of the Croatian Republic[1]
Specialist jurisdiction
  • Coastal patrol, marine border protection, marine search and rescue
Operational structure
Parent agencyCroatian Navy
Facilities
Planes
Notables
People
  • Commodore Marin Stošić, for Commander 2011-2014
  • Vice Admiral Zdravko Kardum, for Commander 2007-2011
  • Ivo Raffanelli, for Commander 2014-2017
Anniversary
  • 4 August

The Croatian Coast Guard (Croatian: Obalna straža Republike Hrvatske) is a division of the Croatian Navy responsible for protecting the interests of Croatia at sea. The Croatian Navy is composed of classical naval forces structured into a flotilla and the Coast Guard that solely consists of ships with peacetime duties, e.g. protection of ecology, fishing, control of tankers, ballast waters, combat against terrorism, human trafficking, and narcotics.[2]

History

On 13 September 2007, the Croatian Parliament passed a bill establishing the Croatian Coast Guard. The Coast Guard's mission is protect sovereign rights and carry out Croatia's jurisdiction in the Ecological and Fisheries Protection Zone, the continental shelf and the high seas. The Coast Guard will also monitor vessels sailing in the Croatian territorial waters. If vessels are caught violating Croatian or international regulations and disregard warnings by the Coast Guard, Coast Guard ships and airplanes are authorized to pursue them and if necessary open fire, while taking care not to jeopardize the lives of the vessel's crew.

Under the law, the commander of the Coast Guard is a Navy officer who is appointed and relieved of duty by the President of the Republic at the government's proposal.[3]

Organization

Ships of Croatian Navy under the Command of Coast Guard:

  • Coast Guard Command
  • 1st Division – Split
  • 2nd Division – Pula
    • OB-03 Cavtat
    • OB-04 Hrvatska Kostajnica
    • Tug LR-73
    • Modrulj 2

Croatian part of Adriatic Sea is also controlled by Croatian Police – Maritime and Harbormasters' offices (Lučka kapetanija) whose ships are marked similar to Navy ships. Besides the warships, the Coast Guard has at its disposal two Pilatus PC-9 aircraft and four Mil Mi-171 helicopters of the Croatian Air Force.

Fleet

The cornerstone of the Coast Guard forces are four Mirna class patrol boats (OB-01 to 04). They were upgraded with new radars and their stern anti-aircraft guns have been replaced with hoists for a semi-rigid inflatable. These are to be augmented and eventually replaced by an entirely new class. Coast Guard possess one new offshore patrol ship OOB-31 Omiš built in Brodosplit which is lead ship in future class.

Two "Modrulj" rubber boats (15 m long) for surveillance of Croatian borders on the Adriatic and prevention of poaching in fisheries were handed over to the Croatian Coast Guard on March 10, 2026, in the Split military port of Lora.[4] With this handover, the Coast Guard has six such boats.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Zakon o Obalnoj straži Republike Hrvatske [Coast Guard Act of the Republic of Croatia] (125). 28 December 2019.
  2. ^ "U obrani interesa od Savudrije do Molunta". Archived from the original on 2008-03-14. Retrieved 2009-01-29.
  3. ^ "Kernel (1) / Error / Government of the Republic Croatia - official web portal". Archived from the original on 2012-02-13. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
  4. ^ a b Šilović, Ivana (10 March 2026). "Nove brodice za hrvatsko more: "Modrulj" u službi Obalne straže" [New boats for the Croatian sea: "Modrulj" in service with the Coast Guard]. vijesti.hrt.hr. Croatian Radiotelevision (HRT).