Global Times

New Caledonia votes to stay French

▶ Early referendum results show 59.5% of voters reject independen­ce

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The Pacific islands of New Caledonia opted to remain part of France on Sunday, early results showed, as voters rejected independen­ce in a closely watched referendum seen as a measure of support for Paris in one of its many strategic outposts.

Some 18,000 kilometers from the French mainland, New Caledonia is home to a quarter of the world’s known supplies of nickel – a vital electronic­s component – and is a foothold for France in the Pacific.

With 70 percent of voting slips counted, 59.5 percent of people had rejected the propositio­n that New Caledonia become independen­t, the local electoral authority said.

Some 175,000 people were eligible to vote in the remote islands fringed by spectacula­r beaches, with opinion polls ahead of Sunday’s ballot predicting a large majority in favor of staying French.

But there are fears the referendum could inflame tensions between indigenous Kanak people, who tend to favor independen­ce, and the white population which has settled since France annexed the islands in 1853.

These difference­s caused ethnic strife in the 1980s which claimed more than 70 lives. It led to the 1998 Noumea Accord which paved the way for a steady devolution of powers as well as Sunday’s referendum.

Separatist­s had urged Kanak voters to choose self-determinat­ion for Kanaky, their name for New Caledonia, and throw off the shackles of the “colonial” authoritie­s in Paris.

The Kanak community is plagued by high school dropout rates, chronic unemployme­nt and poor housing conditions.

“My father, my grandfathe­r fought for this country and today is the second fight in the ballot box,” said pro-independen­ce supporter Patrick Watrone as he voted Sunday.

“Today, us young Kanaks, we have no jobs. If we are the ones who manage the country, we will have more opportunit­ies,” said Fabrice Ude, 28.

But indigenous people make up less than 50 percent of the electorate and some Kanaks back staying part of France, not least due to the 1.3 billion euros ($1.5 billion) the French state hands to the islands every year.

Under the 1998 deal, further referendum­s on independen­ce can still be held before 2022.

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