8-9-10 December 2023 Shooting Course with M4 / Ak-47 - Vienna
08 May 2023 14:10
8-9-10 December 2023  Shooting Course with M4 / Ak-47 - Vienna
Read more...
3-4 February 2024 Reaction and Decision in Knife Defense-Padua Italy
28 Mar 2023 13:00
3-4 February 2024 Reaction and Decision in Knife Defense-Padua  Italy
Read more...
22-25 February 2024 Ikmi Winter Camp - Tuzla BiH
08 May 2023 14:00
22-25 February 2024  Ikmi Winter Camp - Tuzla  BiH

For more information click here

Read more...
16-17 March 2024 Specialist Course in Close Protection - Italy
08 Apr 2023 13:38
16-17 March 2024  Specialist Course in Close Protection - Italy
Read more...

Tonfa And Tactical Baton

Defensive Baton Techniques

It is especially addressed to the Armed Forces who wish to acquire the  knowledge and skills necessary to use the Tonfa and the Tactical Baton, training or updating their knowledge. The training is carried out with the most up-to-date teaching and training methodologies, based on instinctive learning and stimulation method. All techniques can be attributable to real intervention situations and are "skimmed" by all those beautiful actions to see but perfectly useless and impossible to apply in a real scenario. Basic techniques 
are quickly learned  but only a continuous training will ensure professional effectiveness for a secure protection and control of a person.
A BIT OF HISTORY
The tonfa, originating from the Japanese farmer world, was needed for the cereals and legumes production. It was adopted as a weapon when division into Japanese classes became inevitable and that the right to carry weapons was exclusively reserved for Samurai caste. As a weapon, the tonfa (originally fromthe island of Okinawa) was born in 1677 following the King's ban on peasants and fishermen to carry weapons. They began to use the tools of their work to defend themselves.
THE UNITED STATES
It is from the 1960s/70s that the US first used the Tonfa within the Armed Forces and Police, a  stick named  PR21 because longer than its ancestor of Okinawa (60 cm versus 50 cm ).