16 Jan 2026

FLNKS sends in late request to join Paris talks on New Caledonia remotely

12:29 pm on 16 January 2026
Local residents attend a campaign meeting of the Front de Liberation Nationale Kanak et Socialiste (FLNKS) poses for a photograph at the Riviere Salee district during a campaign meeting in Noumea, in the French Pacific territory of New Caledonia, on July 3, 2024. French people go to polls on July 7, 2024 for the decisive final round of the snap election France's President called after his camp received a drubbing in European elections last month. (Photo by Delphine MAYEUR / AFP)

Photo: DELPHINE MAYEUR

New Caledonia's pro-independence FLNKS group has put in a late request to join talks on the territory's future remotely.

The meeting, convened by French President Emmanuel Macron, is calling all politicians from the French Pacific territory back to the negotiating table.

The FLNKS said earlier this week it will not travel to Paris for the "make or break" roundtable.

However, as the meeting approached, FLNKS officials advised that they had also made a last-minute proposal to the French President's office: that, instead of travelling to Paris, they could take part in the talks, remotely, by way of videoconference.

The offer was conveyed in a letter to the President, FLNKS official and Union Calédonienne secretary general Dominique Fochi confirmed to public broadcaster Nouvelle-Calédonie la 1ère on Thursday.

But even though Macron's advisors acknowledged receipt of the FLNKS message, it is not known whether he would finally entertain the last-minute request.

"We treated FLNKS fairly, just like the other political groups", one of Macron's advisors said, adding that "even in the visible absence of FLNKS" they believe it is "still worth moving forward".

During question time in Parliament, on Wednesday, in Paris, Minister for Overseas Naïma Moutchou's words were more direct.

Referring to FLNKS's absence, she said: "We will not accept that, due to the absence of some, New Caledonians would be held hostage. Nobody has a right of veto on the territory of New Caledonia", she told MPs in the National Assembly.

The meeting follows talks held in July 2025 that led to the signing of an agreement project since dubbed the "Bougival" text.

The project agreement intended to pave the way for the creation of a "state of New Caledonia" within France and its correlated "New Caledonian nationality", as well as the gradual transfer of more powers from France to its Pacific territory.

But just a few days later, on 9 August 2025, the FLNKS (Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front), one of the main components in New Caledonia's pro-independence Kanak movement, denounced the Bougival text, saying it was a "lure" of independence.

France's President Emmanuel Macron delivers a press conference upon the signing of the declaration on deploying post-ceasefire force in Ukraine during the Coalition of the Willing summit on security guarantees for Ukraine, at the Elysee Palace in Paris on January 6, 2026. The summit of the group of Ukraine supporters dubbed the "Coalition of the Willing" is the latest of several meetings planned for the new year as diplomatic efforts to end Europe's deadliest conflict since World War II have gained pace in recent weeks. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / POOL / AFP)

A Paris meeting, convened by French President Emmanuel Macron, is calling all politicians from the French Pacific territory back to the negotiating table. Photo: AFP / Pool / Ludovic Marin

More details from Macron's entourage

On Wednesday, Macron's entourage (including his closest advisors) also provided some information on the meeting's format and the fact that they believed pursuing the talks was "still worth it", "without a passage en force", but "without paralysing (New Caledonia) either", because "expectations from New Caledonia's population are high".

The initial roundtable at the French Presidential office, in the form of a plenary session, is announced to take place on 16 January in the afternoon (Paris time), with officials in attendance including President Macron, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu, Speakers of both Houses of Parliament Gérard Larcher (Senate) and Yaël Braun-Pivet (National Assembly), as well as Minister for Overseas Naïma Moutchou.

New Caledonia's politicians would then split into several workshops for the whole weekend, each focusing on a specific theme, including New Caledonia's economic recovery, the indigenous Kanak people's identity and recognition, the process of transferring powers from France to New Caledonia and the notion of self-determination.

One of the workshops would also focus on an offer made in December 2025 by French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu: a financial assistance recovery package of over €2 billion over a period of five years.

The expected outcome would be a synthetical final document containing additions and amendments to the July 2025 text.

Scrap the name of Bougival, but keep the substance

One notable feature would also be that the name "Bougival" should eventually disappear in the final version of the expected agreement, which it is hoped would be presented on Monday, 19 January.

"What we sometimes observe in certain cases is that this agreement of July 12, known as the Bougival agreement, had become, by its very name, an obstacle to moving forward", one president's advisor admitted.

"We will see during the discussion that will begin on Friday whether it is appropriate to give a new name to the agreement of July 12 to better represent the feelings of all parties," the Élysée concluded.

It was also expected, should the new text be allowed to progress, that a Constitutional amendment would later be endorsed by the French Congress (which is made up of both Houses of Parliament, the National Assembly - Lower House - and the Senate -Upper House).

A consultation of New Caledonia's population, by way of a de facto referendum on the framework blueprint, would also be re-activated, the presidential sources told French national media.

This referendum-like consultation was put on hold in December 2025, due to delays and an expected lack of parliamentary support.

The date of New Caledonia's crucial provincial elections (currently scheduled for no later than 28 June 2026) could once again be postponed to September.

Those local elections were originally planned to take place in May 2024 and since then have been re-scheduled three times.

From Macron's entourage's point of view, with the five (out of six) New Caledonian political groups in attendance in Paris this week, "there is a possibility to bring about an agreement that would gather, if everyone signs, 75 percent of New Caledonia's Congress members".

75.9 percent support at the local Congress

In New Caledonia's Parliament (the Congress), apart from the FLNKS (which currently holds 13 of the 54 seats, 24.08 percent), the other political parties who support the Bougival project total 41 MPs (75.9 percent).

New Caledonia's other parties (both pro-independence and pro-France) who signed the Bougival document all resolved to honour their signatures and to continue defending it with their respective supporters and militants.

In the pro-independence camp, apart from a hard-line FLNKS now dominated by Union Calédonienne, two parties now regarded as "moderate" are supporting the Bougival process: PALIKA (Kanak Liberation Party) and UPM (Progressist Union in Melanesia).

They split from the FLNKS, citing profound differences.

PALIKA and UPM are now formed into a Congress caucus totalling 12 MPs.

They believe within the Bougival project framework, their goal of full sovereignty remains achievable in the middle run.

However, even though they signed the document in July 2025, they have since consistently voiced some reservations and wished for more clarifications and possible amendments on the text.

This regarded, for instance, questions as to how the envisaged transfers of powers would legally materialise and translate.

Apart from the pro-independence camp (FLNKS and UNI), the other parties, on the pro-France side, are Eveil Océanien-Calédonie Ensemble - now merged into one single Congress caucus of 8 MPs - Rassemblement (6) and Les Loyalistes (13).

Economy still reeling

During the Paris talks on Friday, a significant part is also scheduled to focus on New Caledonia's economic recovery and French assistance.

New Caledonia was engulfed in civil unrest in May 2024, leading to the death of 14 people, over €2 billion in material damage, thousands left jobless and a drop of 13.5 percent in the French territory's GDP.

Last month, French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu mooted a plan totalling over €2 billion over a five-year period to help the French Pacific territory's recovery.

But the plan would also involve, beyond five years, that France should cease funding areas and powers that had already been transferred to local authorities over the past 20 years, under the previous 1998 Nouméa autonomy Accord.

Meanwhile, the French assistance plans cannot yet be translated into actions: they largely depend on passing the 2026 appropriation (budget) Bill, which has not been endorsed yet by a divided French Parliament with no clear majority.

On Wednesday 14 January, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu survived another two motions of no confidence, tabled respectively by far-right Rassemblement National (RN) and far-left LFI (La France Insoumise, unbowed France).

The LFI motion received 256 votes in support while the RN document was supported by 142 MPs.

They needed at least 288 votes to pass and trigger the downfall of the French government.

They were both in protest against France's stance with regards to the signing of the "Mercosur" trade agreement between European Union and Latin American countries on 10 January.

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