Gendarmerie Nationale (France)
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Gendarmerie Nationale | |
Gendarmerie Nationale area |
|
Coverage | |
---|---|
Area | France (rural) |
Size | 674,843 km² |
Population | Approx 66 million |
Operations | |
Formed | 1793 |
HQ | Paris |
Officers | 104,000 |
Regions | 3 |
Stations | |
Directeur Général | Guy Parayre |
Website | Gendarmerie Nationale |
In France, the Gendarmerie Nationale is the national military police force.
At March 10, 2005, the total staff complement is of 104,275 personnel.
Its missions include:
- The policing of countryside areas and of small towns, usually populations under 10,000, outside of the jurisdiction of the French National Police.
- Criminal investigations under judiciary supervision.
- Crowd control and other security activities.
- The security of airports and military installations, as well as all investigations relating to the military, including in foreign interventions.
- Participations in ceremonies involving foreign heads of states or heads of governments.
See gendarmerie for similar forces in other countries.
While administratively a part of the armed forces, thus under the aegis of the Ministry of Defence, it is operationally attached to the Ministry of the Interior for its missions within France, and criminal investigations are run under the supervision of judges. Its members operate in uniform and exceptionally in plainclothes.
The origins of the modern gendarmerie lie with the maréchaussée of 18th century France. This was a mounted police force organised and equipped along military lines. While its existence ensured the relative safety of French rural districts and roads the marechaussee was regarded in contemporary England (which had no effective police force of any nature) as a symbol of foreign tyranny. In 1789, on the eve of the French Revolution, the marechaussee numbered 3,660 men divided into small detachments or brigades. By law dated 16 February 1791 this force was renamed gendarmerie nationale. Its personnel and role remained unchanged. Under Napoleon the numbers and responsibilities of the gendarmerie were significantly expanded.
Career gendarmes are either commissioned or non-commissioned officers. The lower ranks consist in auxiliary gendarmes on limited-time contracts.
The gendarmerie is sometimes unofficially referred to as the maréchaussée (an old name for the service), and the gendarmes as pandores.
The officer school of the Gendarmerie Nationale is located in Melun.
The Gendarmerie Nationale is divided into the gendarmerie départementale and the gendarmerie mobile.
Contents |
[edit] The Gendarmerie Départementale
The Gendarmerie Départementale, also named «La Blanche»[1] (The White), conducts local policing functions throughout the French territory. Its territorial divisions are based on the administrative divisions of France.
It is divided into regions (headed by a general, one for each defense zone), themselves divided into legions (headed by a colonel, one for each of the 26 administrative region), themselves divided into groupements (one for each of the 100 département, thus the name), themselves divided into compagnies (one for each of the 342 arrondissements).
It maintains gendarmerie stations throughout the rural parts of the territory. In addition, it has specialized units:
- Research units, who conduct criminal investigations when their difficulty exceeds the abilities of the territorial units;
- Surveillance and intervention units, reinforce gendarmerie forces in high crime areas;
- Units for prevention of juvenile delinquency;
- Highway patrols
- Mountain units, specialized in search and rescue operations, surveillance and inquiries in mountaineous areas.
In addition, the Gendarmerie has an institute (Institut de Recherche Criminelle de la Gendarmerie Nationale) specializing in the investigation of crimes by scientific and technological means.
Note that the research units may be called into action by the judiciary even within cities. As an example, the Paris research section of the Gendarmerie was in charge of the enquiries into the vote-rigging allegations in the 5th district of Paris (see corruption scandals in the Paris region).
Gendarmes normally operate in uniform. They may operate in plainclothes only for specific missions and with their supervisors' authorization.
[edit] The Gendarmerie Mobile
The Gendarmerie Mobile, also named « La Jaune » (The Yellow), is divided into legions, similarly as the Gendarmerie Départementale.
Its main responsibilities are
- crowd and riot control
- security of public buildings
- all policing tasks that require large amounts of personnel (Vigipirate counter-terrorism patrols, searches in the countryside...).
It has specialized units:
- the security and intervention group of the Gendarmerie Nationale (GSIGN), consisting of:
- the intervention group of the Gendarmerie Nationale (GIGN), an elite counter-terrorism and hostage rescue unit,
- the parachutist squadron of the Gendarmerie Nationale (EPIGN),
- a detachment to the security group of the President of the French Republic, whose responsibility is to ensure the safety of the President and of his family and guests.
In addition, it has armored units:
- 17 squadrons equipped with armored personnel carriers, throughout the French territory;
- the armored group at Versailles-Satory, consisting of three squadrons of armored personnel carriers and one squadron of heavy armored cars with 90 mm cannons.
Such units may intervene abroad in varied cases such as a hostage crisis or the support of peacekeeping operations.
The tasks of the gendarmes mobiles tasks are similar to those of the police units known as Compagnies Républicaines de Sécurité (CRS), for which they are often mistaken. Easy ways to distinguish them include:
- the uniform of the CRS is blue, the gendarmes mobiles are clad in black;
- the CRS wear a big red CRS patch; the gendarmes have stylized grenades.
[edit] Special divisions
[edit] Gendarmerie Maritime
Main article: Gendarmerie Maritime
Placed under the dual supervision of the Gendarmerie and the Navy, its missions include:
- police and security in the naval bases;
- maritime surveillance;
- police at sea;
- assistance and rescue at sea.
[edit] Gendarmerie des Transports Aériens
Placed under the dual supervision of the Gendarmerie and the direction of civilian aviation of the transportation ministry, its missions include:
- police and security in civilian airfields and airports;
- filtering access to aircraft, counter-terrorism and counter-narcotic activities, freight surveillance;
- surveillance of technical installations of the airports (control tower...);
- traffic control on the roads within the airports;
- protection of important visitors stopping for a layover;
- judiciary inquiries pertaining to accidents of civilian aircraft.
[edit] Gendarmerie de l'Air
Placed under the dual supervision of the Gendarmerie and the Air Force, it fulfills police and security missions in the air bases, and goes on the site of accident of military aircraft.
[edit] Gendarmerie de l'Armement
It fulfills police and security missions in the establishments of the Délégation Générale de l'Armement (defense procurement agency).
[edit] Republican Guard
Main article: French Republican Guard
The Garde Républicaine, is a ceremonial unit based in Paris, whose main mission is to guard official buildings and perform honorary services. They also protect the French president.
[edit] Trivia
- In 2005, the Gendarmerie switched its 70,000 personal computers from Microsoft Office (or Microsoft Word) to the OpenOffice.org suite. In 2006, they are switching web browsers from Internet Explorer to Mozilla Firefox and email clients to Mozilla Thunderbird. According to Gen. Brachet, head of communications and computing systems, the goal is to move all applications to fully standardised protocols and formats, so that they are platform-neutral.
- The symbol of the gendarmerie is a grenade, it's also worn by the Italian Carabinieri and the Grenadier Guards in England.
[edit] Some notes
- ^ White is the color of the stripes that the gendarmes wear on their kepis.
[edit] External links
[edit] See also
- Law enforcement in France
- Police
- Gendarmerie
- Le gendarme de Saint-Tropez - cult comedy series