New Caledonia voters support staying part of France

French authorities say a majority of voters in New Caledonia, an archipelago in in the South Pacific, have chosen to remain part of France.

The overseas ministry said results show 53.3 per cent of the voters who participated in the referendum on Sunday have chosen to maintain ties with France, while 46.7 per cent supported independence.

Sunday's independence referendum is part of a three-decade decolonisation effort aimed at settling tensions on the archipelago between native Kanaks seeking independence and residents willing to remain in France. The South Pacific archipelago has been part of France since 1853.

French President Emmanuel Macron was scheduled to make a televised address later Sunday from Paris.

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More than 180,000 voters were invited to answer the question: "Do you want New Caledonia to gain full sovereignty and become independent?"

"Today is not a day like any other. Everyone woke up with the will to express oneself (through the vote). This is a historic day," Robert Wayaridri, 60, told The Associated Press.

In Noumea, the capital, large lines of people waited to vote under the hot sun, sometimes for hours. Almost 80 per cent of voters had already casted their ballots one hour before poll stations closed, according to the French ministry of the Overseas. Some polling stations in Noumea closed an hour late because people were still waiting to vote at the planned closing time.

New Caledonia referendum

Across the archipelago, horns and cheers could be heard all day in the streets, and some people waved pro-independence flags in a relaxed atmosphere.

The FLNKS movement leading the independence campaign called on its supporters to stay "calm and respectful."

Corine Florentin, who was born in Noumea 52 years ago, said she voted against independence because she wants to "remain French."

"We can live together, all races together, and design our common future," she said.

A student at the University of New Caledonia, Guillaume Paul, 18, also voted "no" because he wants the archipelago to keep its ties with France.

"What would the country become if it was independent? There is a real danger that without the financing brought by France, the university would disappear, " he said.

New Caledonia referendum

But Joachim Neimbo, 22, was in favour of independence.

"I voted yes, because that's my people's combat. We want the recognition of our identity, our culture. I think we are able to manage ourselves," he said.

Taguy Wayenece, 25, also voted "yes" to independence.

"We need to return to tradition, to working in the fields, to stay with the tribe. Modern life is too complicated for us," he said.

Two years ago, 56.4 per cent of voters who participated in a similar referendum chose to keep the region's ties with Paris.

The archipelago now counts 270,000 inhabitants, including both native Kanaks, who once suffered from strict segregation policies and widespread discrimination, and descendants of European colonisers.

New Caledonia became French in 1853 under Emperor Napoleon III — Napoleon's nephew and heir — and was used for decades as a prison colony. It became an overseas territory after World War II, with French citizenship granted to all Kanaks in 1957.

– Reported with Associated Press



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