When riots broke out in Kosovo in 1989 and 1990, helicopters were used to break up the mass demonstrations by Albanians. The AB-212s were used to transport special forces units to rebel strongholds.[citation needed]
The Federal Secretariat of Internal Affairs established a helicopter squadron during the 1960s acquiring a number of helicopters. This squadron was dissolved in 1992 and integrated into the Republican Secretariat of Internal Affairs Helicopter Unit.
Public Security Service i.e. police helicopter fleet included the Bell 206B/L, Soko Gazelle SA-341/342, Bell AB-212, Aerospatiale SA-365N Dauphin, Mi-17 and Mi-24. In 1998, a Sikorsky S-76 had entered service in the fleet for VIP transport.[4]
The State Security Directorate had its own Aviation Unit with a fleet of helicopters within its Special Operations Unit. The Special Operations Unit took part in numerous combat operations during the Kosovo crisis. Mi-24s were used to attack rebel training camps and hundreds of transport and medevac flight were carried out. During the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, Special Operations Unit's helicopters continued to fly liaison and medivac missions and no helicopters were damaged but the fleet hangar was destroyed.[5]
In 2002, the Ministry of Internal Affairs was re-organised and consequently the Special Operations Unit's aviation personnel was integrated into the Helicopter Unit of the Police while its helicopter fleet (Mi-24 and Mi-17) was transferred to the Air Force.[5][6]
VIP transport (transport of the President of the Republic, Prime Minister and Minister of Internal Affairs)
The Helicopter Unit has its own training course for its pilots and its own aviation technician support unit.[6][11]
Fleet
Helicopters are typically painted in blue and white color scheme except for three helicopters (used as air support to the Gendarmery and Special-Anti-Terrorist Unit) that are painted in military camouflage pattern used by the helicopter fleet of the Serbian Air Force and two fire-fighting helicopters that are painted in red.
^ ab"Helikopterska jedinica". Archive - Ministry of Interior (in Serbian). 2009. Retrieved 12 October 2019.
^ abcdIgor, Salinger (1 May 2017). "пола века У ва здуХу"(PDF). Odbrana (Ministry of Defence and Serbian Armed Forces) (in Serbian) (279). Belgrade: Politika a.d.: 24–29. ISSN1452-2160. Retrieved 13 October 2019.