7 Oct 2020

French post-referendum ministerial visit welcomed in Noumea

10:26 am on 7 October 2020

The planned visit of the French overseas minister to New Caledonia is being described as essential to restart a dialogue between the rival camps after last Sunday's independence referendum.

New Caledonia anti-independence supporters

New Caledonia anti-independence supporters Photo: FB The Loyalists

The Caledonia Together Party said Sebastien Lecornu needs to get a measure of New Caledonia's complexity and get it out of what it described as its referendum rut.

The new French government installed in July showed little interest in the referendum, with Caledonia Together accusing Paris of having been deafeningly silent.

The party says a dialogue is not an option but an obligation as the pro-independence side is poised to call a third referendum after losing last Sunday and two years ago.

Caledonia Together, which fell out with the other groups in the pro-French camp, had been calling for sovereignty to be combined with being part of the French republic.

Mr Lecornu is due later this week and stay for three weeks, including the first two in quarantine.

Sebastien Lecornu at New Caledonia House in Paris.

Sebastien Lecornu at New Caledonia House in Paris. Photo: supplied FB French Overseas Ministry

Melanesian Spearhead Group continues to support Kanak decolonisation agenda

The Melanesian Spearhead Group says it will continue to support the Kanak people in their quest for independence from France despite the results of the recent referendum in New Caledonia.

On Sunday, over 53 percent of voters opted for the status quo.

George Hoa'au, acting director general of the Melanesia Spearhead Group Secretariat in Port Vila, sought to reassure the Kanak people that the sub-regional group stood in solidarity with them.

"The collective visions by the founding Leaders of the newly Independent Melanesian States, which led to the establishment of the Melanesian Spearhead Group was partly a response on the need to liberate Melanesians from Colonialism," Hoa'au said.

Kanak independence supporters wave flags of the Socialist Kanak National Liberation Front (FLNKS) after the referendum on independence on the French South Pacific territory of New Caledonia in Noumea on October 4, 2020. (Photo by Theo Rouby / AFP)

Kanak independence supporters wave flags of the Socialist Kanak National Liberation Front (FLNKS) after the referendum on independence on the French South Pacific territory of New Caledonia in Noumea on October 4, 2020. (Photo by Theo Rouby / AFP) Photo: AFP or licensors

Sunday's referendum on independence from France was the second in a series of three possible referendums agreed to in the Noumea Accord which was signed in 1998.

The first referendum for self-determination was held in November 2018 and the third referendum, which Kanak politicians are expected to call, would most likely be held in 2022.