Presidential Honor Guard (Venezuela)

The Presidential Honor Guard is the military brigade responsible for the immediate security of the president of Venezuela. The current head of the Presidential Honor Guard is Iván Hernández Dala.[1]

Presidential Honor Guard
Active12 February 1812
Allegiance Venezuela
TypeHonor guard
Size2,000
Garrison/HQCasa Militar
Commanders
Current
commander
Iván Hernández Dala

History

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The Presidential Honor Guard was first created in Santa Cruz de Mompox by Simòn Bolivar. The structure was followed years later due to the need of rulers to maintain the presidency of Venezuela, as well as to safeguard the institutions of Venezuela. The beginning of the institution dates back to 10 March 1810, when the Caracas Supreme Board recommends creating an armed body for the safekeeping and custody of Congress, configuring it on 9 March 1811, when a company called National Guard was created. In July 1811, a Rural Service is also attributed to protect landowners and prevent theft and crime.

On 12 February 1812, the Presidential Honor Guard was formally created by Bolivar himself as a guard unit that would serve as his personal escort to the battlefield.[2] Its uniforms mirror the ones used today by the current guard.

The current Presidential Honor Guard Brigade's lineage dates to 1958, during the presidency of Rómulo Betancourt, when what was then the Presidential Honor Guard Regiment was raised as part of the National Armed Forces, but reporting directly to the Presidential office in his capacity as Commander in Chief of the armed services.

It was restructured in 2015 due to increasing crime and violence alongside the Brigada Especial de de Proteccion Y Aseguramiento Presidencial and the Unidad Especial de Seguridad Y Proteccion A Personalidades De Estado.[3]

Organization

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Currently, the Presidential Honor Guard is a unit of brigade size and has 2,000 members.[4] The brigade is made of military personnel of the five branches of the National Bolivarian Armed Forces of Venezuela and specialized members of the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (SEBIN), in addition to the Corps of Scientific, Criminal and Criminal Investigations (CICPC), Bolivarian National Police (CNB) and personnel of different state police department of Venezuela according to the specialty that is required to obtain the operational excellence of the Presidential Honor Guard, this unit is commanded by a general or flag grade officer according to the provisions of the President of Venezuela, who as Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces, appoints and relieves its commander.

Commanders

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Operations

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Security

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The Presidential Honor Guard conducts operations required for the maintenance of the internal order of the country, cooperate in the development of the military operations required to ensure the defense of the national command will exercise the activities of administrative police and criminal investigation attributed by law, as well as actively participate in national development, in the territory and other geographical areas of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

Ceremonial

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Presidential Honor Guard at the tomb of Hugo Chávez

The brigade provides the honor guard to the president of Venezuela in State Arrival Ceremonies at the Miraflores Palace and to the president in every activity held in the grounds and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Carabobo Field, Valencia Municipality, Carabobo, in honor of the organization's participation in one of the final two battles of the Venezuelan War of Independence, the Battle of Carabobo on 24 June 1821, fought at the very grounds where the tomb is located, where a Guard Mounting ceremony is held daily in the midday hours. From 2013 onward the Presidential Honor Guard is also charged with mounting the guard at the tomb of the late President Hugo Chávez at Fort Montana in Caracas plus in Bolivar's renovated mausoleum in the National Pantheon of Venezuela, with guard mounting duties done daily, with all of them open to the public.

References

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  1. ^ "4 figuras clave de las Fuerzas Armadas en la crisis que vive Venezuela". BBC News. 1 May 2019. Retrieved 11 August 2019.
  2. ^ "Jefe de Estado preside acto de ascenso de oficiales de la Guardia de Honor Presidencial". Vicepresidencia de la República Bolivariana de Venezuela (in European Spanish). Retrieved 11 August 2019.
  3. ^ "Venezuela President Increases Personal Security Amid Economic Crisis". 27 March 2017.
  4. ^ "WEB MPPDPSGG (Noticia)". www.presidencia.gob.ve. Retrieved 11 August 2019.
  5. ^ https://poderopediave.org/persona/carlos-alcala-cordones/