Air Transport Gendarmerie Explained

Air Transport Gendarmerie should not be confused with Air Gendarmerie.

Unit Name:Air Transport Gendarmerie
Dates:1953 - present
Country:France
Agency:National Gendarmerie
Role:Airport security
Command Structure:Directorate General for Civil Aviation
Sworn Type Label:Officers
Sworn:1,100
Programmes:-->

The Air Transport Gendarmerie (French: Gendarmerie des Transports Aériens) (GTA) is a branch of the French Gendarmerie. It is placed under the dual supervision of the Gendarmerie and the Directorate General for Civil Aviation of the Transportation Ministry,[1] and has a strength of about 1,100, commanded by a senior officer or by a general officer.[2]

Its missions are centered on airport security, and it also carries out judicial inquiries pertaining to civilian aviation accidents.

The GTA was created in 1953 out of existing airport gendarmerie specialist units created from 1946.

The Air Transport Gendarmerie should not be confused with the smaller Air Gendarmerie, which provides policing for the French Air Force.

Missions

The GTA's diverse missions include:

Personnel of the GTA cover a wide range of specialities, including security patrols, freight inspectors, counter-snipers, aviators, dog handlers, auditors, and health inspectors. All personnel follow an initial aviation-related course called French: Formation Aéronautique de Base. Most personnel receive more specialised training at the French: [[École nationale de l'aviation civile]].[3]

Units

The GTA headquarters are in Paris. The GTA is divided into two metropolitan groupings and the overseas units. The metropolitan groupings are divided into companies, and both also maintain a French: Brigade de recherche.

The different companies cover more airports than just the airport in their name. For example the Paris-Orly Company also covers Issy-les-Moulineaux, Beauvais-Tillé, Lille-Lesquin, Toussus-le-Noble & CRNA Nord Athis-Mons, the Strasbourg Company also covers Bâle-Mulhouse, Metz-Nancy-Lorraine et CRNA Est Reims, and the Bordeaux Company also covers Biarritz-Anglet-Bayonne and Pau.

Northern Grouping

The Northern Grouping (French: Groupement Nord) is headquartered at Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle airport. It contains the Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle company, the Paris-Orly Company, the Brest Company, and the Strasbourg Company.

Southern Grouping

The Southern Grouping (French: Groupement Sud) is headquartered in Aix-en-Provence. It contains the Lyons Company, the Bordeaux Company, the Marseilles Company, the Nice Company, and the Toulouse Company.

Overseas Air Transport Gendarmerie

Seven small brigades (typically of ten to twelve gendarmes each) cover overseas installations. Together these are known as the "Overseas Air Transport Gendarmerie" (French: "GTA outre-mer"):[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2019. Booklet of the Directorate General for Civil Aviation.
  2. Arrêté du 28 avril 2006 relatif à l'organisation, à l'emploi et au soutien de la gendarmerie des transports aériens. 2006. Order.
  3. Web site: June 15, 2017. La gendarmerie des transports aériens : ange gardien des aéroports civils. 2020-07-29. www.gendinfo.fr. fr.
  4. Web site: La gendarmerie des transports aériens. 2021-12-21. Ministry of the Interior. fr.