zone of security - definição. O que é zone of security. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é zone of security - definição

RESTRICTED ECONOMIC ZONE IN RUSSIA
Border security zone of russia

Border Security Zone of Russia         
A Border Security Zone in Russia is the designation of a strip of land (usually, though not always, along a Russian external border) where economic activity and access are restricted in line with the Frontier Regime Regulations set by the Federal Security Service (FSB). For foreign tourists to visit the zone a permit issued by the local FSB department is required.
Phreatic zone         
  • Cross section showing the water table varying with surface topography as well as a perched water table
AREA IN AN AQUIFER, BELOW THE WATER TABLE
Zone of saturation; Saturated zone
The phreatic zone, or zone of saturation, is the part of an aquifer, below the water table, in which relatively all pores and fractures are saturated with water. Above the water table is the vadose zone.
Security agency         
  • Kesklinn]], [[Tallinn]]
  • The headquarters of the [[Finnish Security Intelligence Service]] or SUPO in [[Punavuori]], [[Helsinki]]
GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATION
State security police; Security Agency; List of security agencies; List of national security agencies; Security apparatus
A security agency is a governmental organization that conducts intelligence activities for the internal security of a nation. They are the domestic cousins of foreign intelligence agencies, and typically conduct counterintelligence to thwart other countries' foreign intelligence efforts.

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Border Security Zone of Russia

A Border Security Zone in Russia is the designation of a strip of land (usually, though not always, along a Russian external border) where economic activity and access are restricted in line with the Frontier Regime Regulations set by the Federal Security Service (FSB). For foreign tourists to visit the zone a permit issued by the local FSB department is required.

The restricted access zone (of 7.5 kilometres (4.7 mi) width generally, but e.g., running as much as 90 kilometres (56 mi) deep along the Estonian border) was established in the Soviet Union in 1934, and later expanded, at times including vast territories. In 1935–1936, in order to secure the western border of the Soviet Union, many nationalities considered unreliable (Poles, Germans, Ingrian Finns, Estonians, Latvians) were forcibly transferred from the zone by forces of NKVD.

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the borders of the new Russian Federation were dramatically different, but the zone was not corrected accordingly and hence effectively ceased to exist. In 1993, the Law on the State Border was adopted and reestablished a border strip with restricted access, which should not exceed 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) (although in fact it became much wider in some places). In 2004 the law was amended, the 5 km restriction was removed, and the FSB was legally authorized to draw the zone's limits on its own without coordination with local authorities. In 2006 FSB Director Nikolay Patrushev and his deputy Sergei Smirnov issued decrees delimiting the zone, which expanded greatly and included many large settlements, important transport routes and resort areas, especially in the Republic of Karelia, Leningrad Oblast, and Primorsky Krai. In 2007, pressured by the public, FSB curtailed the zone in some places.

Exemplos do corpo de texto para zone of security
1. It was a failure of the institutions that protect Kandahar city, despite the Canadian money and lives expended to build a zone of security here in the past two years.
2. But another topic, barely discussed so far, may be almost as important: whether NATO can extend its last major mission of expanding Europe‘s zone of security to former communist countries.
3. A well designed strategy, I believe, can accomplish both goals –– what I have called the "twin goals." The strategy is based, in part, on the principle of extending our borders, pushing our zone of security outward, so that our actual physical borders are our last line of defense, not our first.
4. They use both Radiation Portal Monitors (RPMs) and handheld units such as radiation isotope identifier devices (RIIDs). The radiation screens that FedEx and UPS conduct support CBP‘s efforts to increase our zone of security by screening international air cargo before it is loaded on board cargo aircraft bound for the United States.