Ukrainian People's Militsiya, created in June 1941, preceded the official founding of the
Ukrainian Auxiliary Police in mid-August 1941 by
Heinrich Himmler. There is conclusive historical evidence indicating that members of the Ukrainian Militsiya took a leading role in the 1941
Lviv pogroms, after the German army reached Lwów (Lemberg) at the end of June in Soviet-occupied eastern Poland (now
Lviv, Ukraine). Initially the Ukrainian Militsiya acted independently, with the blessings of the
SS, but later were limited to joint operations (
Aktionen) with German units or otherwise functioned directly under the Nazi command. The Ukrainian People's Militsiya was active in occupied territories behind the Wehrmacht lines, assisting the German Security Police and the
Einsatzgruppen while the army kept advancing in the direction of
Zhytomyr,
Rivne and
Kiev. Heinrich Himmler was appointed Chief of SS and Police for the Eastern Territories on 17 July 1941 and decreed the formation of the
Schutzmannschaften from among the non-German auxiliaries. In mid-August he regrouped the indigenous Militsiya which had sprung up under military rule to form the core of the official
Ukrainische Hilfspolizei. Before that, members of the Ukrainian Militsiya in formerly Polish cities with sizeable Polish-Jewish presence compiled lists of targets for the branch offices of the KdS and assisted with the roundups (as in
Stanisławów,
Włodzimierz Wołyński,
Lutsk). In
Korosten, the Militsiya rounded up 238 Jews described as "a source of continuous unrest" and carried out the killings by themselves. In
Sokal, on 30 June 1941 they arrested and executed 183 Jews dubbed "the commissars". Other locations followed. ==Ukrainian People's Militsiya instructions==