
Last modified: 2007-09-29 by ivan sache
Keywords: antarctica | france | terres australes et antarctiques francaises | kerguelen | taaf | stars: 3 (white) | anchor (white) | fishery inspection | letters: taaf (white) |
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Flag of France - Image by Željko Heimer, 22 September 2001
See also:
Terres australes et antarctiques
françaises are a French oversea territory with administrative and financial autonomy, as prescribed by the Law of 6 August 1955.
The territory is composed of four districts, as prescribed by the Territorial Decree of 20 October 1956:
- Kerguelen Islands (7,215 sq. km), with a permanent base (Port-aux-Français, 68 inhabitants)
- Crozet Archipelago (115 sq. km), with a permanent base (Alfred Faure on Ile de la Possession, 29 inhabitants)
- Amsterdam Island (or New Amsterdam, 54 sq. km), with a permanent base
(Martin-de-Viviès, 29 inhabitants) and Saint-Paul Island
(uninhabited, 7 sq. km)
- Adelie Land (Terre Adélie, 432,000 sq. km) in
Antarctica, which is supposed to have 32
inhabitants in 1994 (most probably to maintain claims on
Antarctica despite the Treaty on Antarctica, signed by France,
which does not recognize any territorial claim beneath th Southern
Polar Circle.)
The dependencies called Iles Eparses (Outlying Islands) are
placed under the authority of the Ministery of the Overseas (Ministère
de l'Outremer) since 1 April 1960. Since the Decree of 19 September
1960, the Outlying Islands were administrated by the Prefet of Reunion.
A Decree signed on 3 January 2005 has transfered the administration of
the Outlying Islands to the Prefet, Senior Administrator of TAAF.
The Outlying Islands are made of four islands located in the
Mozambique Channel (Bassas da India, Europa, Juan de Nova, Glorieuses), and
Tromelin, isolated in the north of Reunion.
Bassas da India is an emerging, circular madreporic atoll, with an area
lower than 1 sq. km. At high tide, Bassas de India is nearly completely
submerged.
Europa is the biggest of the Outlying Islands (30 sq. km). From 1905 to
1910, two families from Reunion settled there and attempte to grow
sisal and collect turtle shells. However, agriculture proved to be
impossible on the island because of the huge number of rodents. A
meteorological station was set up on Europa in 1949.
On Juan de Nova (5 sq. km), guano is harvested there since the XIXth
century. The guano workers maintain a meteorological station.
Glorieuses Archipelago (7 sq. km) is made of Grande Glorieuse and
Ile du Lys, as well as of the islets of Roches Vertes and Ile aux
Crabes. A coconut plantation was grown on Grande Glorieuse from
1912 to 1958. A meteorological station was set up on Grande Glorieuse
in 1960; the aims of the station are the prediction of cyclones hitting
the north of Madagascar and the Comoros and assistance to maritime and aerial navigation.
Tromelin (1 sq. km) is completely isolated and scoured by the trade
winds; landing is extremely difficult and agriculture is impossible
because of the wind and the lack of water. A meteorological station was
set up on Tromelin in 1954 upon request of the World Meteorological
Organization; most cyclones threatening Madagascar, Reunion and
Mauritius scour Tromelin.
The Outlying Islands are nature reserves and their access is strictly
restricted. Since 1973, detachments from the French Armed Forces in the South
Zone of Indian Ocean are stationed on Grande Glorieuse, Juan de Nova
and Europa. All the islands but Bassas da India are inhabited by
meteorologists, a gendarme (except Tromelin) and scientists doing
short-time missions.
Tromelin was recently claimed by Mauritius. Following the Convention on
Maritime Rights adopted in 1982, with effect in 1994, the Mauritian
Parliament recently extended Mauritius' territorial waters to 350
nautic miles, encompassing Diego Garcia (Britain), Coetivy
(Seychelles), Saya Malha (Maldives) and Tromelin (France). In late February 2005, Brigitte Girardin, the French Minister of Overseas, "visited"
Tromelin, Europa and Juan de Nova; her visit was of course more
political than touristic. Madagascar and the Comoros also claim the
Outlying Islands of the Mozambique Channel.
Ivan Sache, 7 May 2005
Flag of the Senior Administrator of TAAF - Image by Pierre Gay, 6 July 2000
The only flag specific to the territory is the flag of the Senior
Administrator, which is often presented erroneously as the flag of the territory.
Shortly after he took office, the first Senior Administrator, M.
Richert, who was Administrator of Overseas France, and bore three
stars on his uniform, like a
Vice-Admiral), adopted a personal flag.
It was similar to the flags used by the former
Colonial Governors and High
Commissioners of Overseas Territories, i.e., a blue flag with a
Tricolour flag in canton. The letters TAAF, arranged in
the shape of an anchor, in white, and accompanied by three white
stars, are placed in lower fly. This flag was retained by the Senior Administrators who
succeeded Richert.
The flag can be partially seen in a photo shown by Paris-Match (# 787, 9 May 1964), taken during the visit of M. Louis Jacquinot to the Kerguelen Islands. It was hoisted on any building or vessel when the Senior Administrator was on board. The flag confered to the TAAF headquarters is 70 x 84 cm, the emblem is 22 cm high, and the width of the letter T is 18 cm. The Secretary General, assistant to the Senior Administrator, does not have any special emblem.
Mario Fabretto, 25 September 1998
Coat of arms of TAAF - Image by Pascal Vagnat, 7 May 2005
According to a letter dated 28 October 1981 from Miss Suzanne Gauthier
to Lucien Philippe, published in Flagmaster
[flm] #38 (November 1982), the arms of the territory were created by Miss Gauthier, who registered the original drawing with SPADEM (Société pour la propriété artistique des dessins et modèles) on 4 September 1958.
In the letter Miss Gauthier wrote that Mr Richert had asked for a draft of the arms of the Territory, setting out the elements which ought to be included, particularly the three white
stars which appear on his personal flag.
Mario Fabretto, 25 September 1998
According to Roman Klimes
[klm87], the shield is quartered
azure and argent. However, Klimes shows it azure and or in his image.
The shield is also azure and or on a post stamp of the territory.
The four quarters of the coat of arms stand for the four districts
of the territory:
- a Kerguelen cabbage argent for Kerguelen. The Kerguelen
cabbage (Pringlea antiscorbutica) is endemic to these islands, that is it does
not grow in the wild anywhere else in the world
- a lobster sable for New Amsterdam and St. Paul
- the head and neck of a royal penguin sable and argent crowned or for Crozet Island
- an iceberg argent, for Adelie Land.
The coronet above the shield is inscribed with the name of the
territory sable (in black), this detail being not shown on the above
image. The coronet and stars are or, the anchors argent.
On the post stamps, there is no writing in the 1959-63 and
1970 versions, but writing is present on the 1992 and later versions.
Klimes' image is probably more up-to-date than the one shown above.
Ivan Sache, 1 May 2001
Pennant of the Fishery Police in TAAF - Image by Željko Heimer, 18 December 2003
Fishery is one of the most strategical resources of the TAAF.
The Patagonian Toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides, in French, légine), highly estimated and overpriced in the USA as Chilean Sea Bass, and mostly in
Japan as mero, is found mostly in the TAAF waters. The fish is submitted to
intense poaching, which endangers the species.
The vessels of the TAAF fishery police are stationed in the
Kerguelen islands.
According to Album des Pavillons [pay00], the pennant of the fishery police in TAAF is quartered blue-yellow, following the model of the International Fisheries Inspection Pennant, in apparent proportion 7:6, with the white letters TAAF in upper hoit.
Ivan Sache & Željko Heimer, 18 December 2003
The registration of ships in the Kerguelen Islands allows the ship
owner to employ some foreign workers. It was created to fight against
the so-called flags of convenience
which escape the sea labour rules.
There is no other flag for ships registered in the Kerguelen
Islands but the French tricolour flag.
Pascal Vagnat, Željko Heimer & Armand du Payrat, 22 January 2003
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