Kresimiria 2018 Critical Infrastructure Protection Act

2018 Critical Infrastructure Protection Act

The 2018 Critical Infrastructure Protection Act (CIPA) is a piece of national security legislation that expanded the definition of “state assets” to include privately owned facilities deemed essential to the economy of the Divine Republic of Kresimiria.

Passed in the immediate aftermath of the Bistrica Water Protests, the Act reclassified major mines, hydroelectric dams, and data centers as “National Security Sites.” This designation effectively criminalized protests or labor strikes within a designated perimeter of these facilities, categorizing such actions as “Economic Sabotage.”

The law was championed by Ari Stov as a necessary measure to protect the Republic’s energy and digital grid. However, opposition parties condemned it as a “Corporate Charter of Impunity,” arguing it deployed the Civil Order Force (COF) to act as private security for companies like SeverMin and YakaSys.

Background

In August 2018, Northern Power leader Syv Iric led a massive blockade of the SeverMin headquarters in Bistrica following a toxic chemical leak. The blockade paralyzed the district’s economy and humiliated the central government.

While the CIA eventually broke the protest using digital surveillance and targeted arrests, the government realized that existing trespassing laws were insufficient to deter large-scale civil disobedience on private land. Ari Stov argued that because SeverMin provided coal to National Energy, an attack on the mine was an attack on the state itself.

Key Provisions

  1. National Security Site Designation: The Council for Defence was empowered to designate private facilities as “Critical Infrastructure.” This immediately applied to:
  2. Exclusion Zones: The Act established a mandatory 500-meter “Buffer Zone” around these sites where public assembly is prohibited without a federal permit.
  3. Trespass: Trespassing on a National Security Site was upgraded from a misdemeanor to a serious crime, carrying a mandatory minimum sentence of three years.
  4. COF Jurisdiction: The Act legally authorized the Civil Order Force to patrol and secure these private properties, shifting the cost of corporate security onto the taxpayer.

Parliamentary Passage

The vote highlighted the alliance between the statist establishment and corporate interests.

The bill passed 10-7.

Senator Vote
Magdalena Zuvic (BD) For
Sara Korunic (BD) For
Viktor Durak (VJ) For
Vesna Horvatin (CRF) Against
Bran Maj (VJ) For
Malik Kondratiev (SoK) For
Syv Iric (NP) Against
Branimir Hup (NP) Against
Florijan Kostic (CRF) Against
Dino Colic (BD) For
Chwa Spas (NP) Against
Stoyan Vasilis (BD) Against
Natalia Rybarova (BD) For
Zoran Pesic (BD) For
Kresimir Bukowski (BD) For
Misko Maretic (VJ) For
Ari Stov (BD) For
Boj Volansky (CRF) Against
Ikka Wallman (BLF) -
Isaak von Steuer (BLF) 0

Impact

The Act effectively ended the era of mass physical protest in the north. Since 2018, Northern Power has been forced to rely on legal challenges and media campaigns via Northfocus, as physical blockades now result in immediate felony arrests.

In 2019, the law was used to arrest three activists from The Digital Front who were found trespassing near a YakaSys data center, ostensibly to map its physical vulnerabilities.