President of the Sergeants' Association speaks on the reactivation of the GNR Traffic Brigade 20 years after its extinction

Thursday, 16 April 2026RSS
President of the Sergeants' Association speaks on the reactivation of the GNR Traffic Brigade 20 years after its extinction

Ricardo Rodrigues considers that the extinction “was a gross error in road safety prevention.”

Context & Explainers

GNR (Guarda Nacional Republicana)

The GNR (Guarda Nacional Republicana) is Portugal's national gendarmerie—a military police force founded in 1911, with origins dating to 1801. With over 22,600 personnel, GNR patrols 94-96% of Portuguese territory, covering rural areas, medium towns, and highways. Members are military personnel subject to military law, responsible for public order, customs, coastal control, environmental protection (SEPNA), firefighting/rescue (GIPS), border control, and ceremonial guards. ​ GNR vs. PSP: The PSP (Polícia de Segurança Pública) is Portugal's civilian police force, covering major cities (Lisbon, Porto, Faro) and large urban areas—only 4% of territory but roughly half the population. PSP handles airport security, diplomatic protection, and private security regulation. Both share core missions (public order, crime prevention), but differ in nature: GNR is military with military training; PSP is civilian with police-focused training.

AI Summary AvailableGovernment to reactivate GNR Traffic BrigadeRead the synthesized summary with context and explainers
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