We have held a concession for handling security materials since 2010 and offer you comprehensive services in this field.
The legal regulation of handling security materials is currently represented by Act No. 229/2013 Coll., which came into effect on January 1, 2014, replacing Act No. 310/206 Coll., and further amended by Act No. 266/2014 Coll.
Handling of security materials within the Czech Republic is associated with certain security risks. Therefore, the Parliament of the Czech Republic adopted a law regulating this area. The law was prepared by the Ministry of Industry and Trade in cooperation with the Ministry of the Interior. It regulates the area of handling security materials by creating legal tools that enable the state to adequately regulate this area, especially considering the public interest related to the protection of public order and security, and the states obligation to guarantee basic human rights and freedoms.
The scope of security materials covered by this law is defined by Decree No. 295/2014 Coll., on the list of security materials.
Group 1
Flamethrowers or smoke or gas generators that cause immobilization, injury, or death if operational.
Group 2
Mine igniters, if operational.
Group 3
Fire control, missile guidance, and targeting devices, if operational.
Group 4
Recovery tanks, crane tanks, engineer tanks and engineering machines on tank chassis, if operational, except those used within the integrated rescue system.
Group 5
a) Tanks, combat armored vehicles, including infantry fighting vehicles, armored personnel carriers, combat vehicles with heavy armament and self-propelled artillery systems, including guns, howitzers, cannons, mortars, rocket launchers and systems combining their characteristics, with weapons irreversibly disabled or destroyed under other legal regulations to prevent reuse or modification for military purposes, or vehicles equipped with weapon carriers or devices for laying mines or firing ammunition, or
b) bridge tanks and other armored vehicles and armored personnel carriers, especially vehicles with special superstructures or derived from vehicles mentioned in letter a).
Group 6
a) Combat airplanes and helicopters and other aircraft and helicopters with special design features related to military use, manufactured after January 1, 1946, if operational, or
b) combat unmanned aerial vehicles heavier or lighter than air, motorized or non-motorized, autonomous or remotely controlled, and other unmanned aerial vehicles with special design features related to military use, if operational.
Group 7
Equipment for electronic countermeasures and protection against them (i.e., equipment used to transmit false and misleading signals to radars or radiocommunication receivers or other interference with reception, operation, or function of enemy electronic receivers), including jamming and anti-jamming devices, specially designed for security forces, if operational.
Group 8
a) Military types of attack simulators, combat flight simulators, radar reconnaissance simulators, radar target generators, artillery training devices, anti-submarine warfare simulators, flight simulators (including centrifuge simulators for pilot or astronaut training), radar simulators, navigation flight simulators, guided missile firing simulators, target visualization equipment, unmanned aerial vehicle simulators, weapon simulators, unmanned aerial vehicle simulators, if specially designed for military use, or
b) systems for creating images and interactive environments for simulators, if specially designed for military use.
Group 9
Equipment for electronic countermeasures and protection against them (i.e., equipment used to transmit false and misleading signals to radars or radiocommunication receivers or other interference with reception, operation, or function of enemy electronic receivers), including jamming and anti-jamming devices, specially designed for military use, if operational.
Group 10
a) Portable hand laser devices whose laser is classified as hazard class 3R, 3B or 43 according to ČSN EN 60825-1 ED2, where these laser devices may be modified to generate or amplify coherent electromagnetic radiation visible to the human eye and with which a laser beam can be aimed at a specific target to disable its function,
b) passive tracking systems,
c) laser systems designed specifically to destroy or disable the fulfillment of a target task,
d) particle beam emitting systems capable of destroying or disabling the fulfillment of a target task,
e) high-performance high-frequency systems capable of destroying or disabling the fulfillment of a target task, or
f) laser systems designed specifically to cause permanent blindness to unsupported vision, i.e. uncovered eye or eye equipped with corrective vision aids.
Group 11
Cameras and electro-optical imaging devices specially designed for use in unmanned aerial vehicles included in Group 6, if operational.