Zürcher Nachrichten - Macron holds back on N. Caledonia voting reform after riots

EUR -
AED 3.872734
AFN 72.005736
ALL 98.118186
AMD 410.968376
ANG 1.906708
AOA 961.599428
ARS 1056.404251
AUD 1.628181
AWG 1.892622
AZN 1.792557
BAM 1.956125
BBD 2.136045
BDT 126.421034
BGN 1.958089
BHD 0.397096
BIF 3124.456905
BMD 1.054385
BND 1.418344
BOB 7.310112
BRL 6.111432
BSD 1.057881
BTN 88.882088
BWP 14.462749
BYN 3.46206
BYR 20665.954364
BZD 2.132445
CAD 1.484005
CDF 3020.814401
CHF 0.935893
CLF 0.037437
CLP 1032.991635
CNY 7.627444
CNH 7.634046
COP 4666.361951
CRC 538.42022
CUC 1.054385
CUP 27.941214
CVE 110.283349
CZK 25.258223
DJF 188.382236
DKK 7.458459
DOP 63.744233
DZD 140.480035
EGP 51.984044
ERN 15.815781
ETB 128.119907
FJD 2.399729
FKP 0.832244
GBP 0.834351
GEL 2.883733
GGP 0.832244
GHS 16.899571
GIP 0.832244
GMD 74.861719
GNF 9117.20866
GTQ 8.170359
GYD 221.22366
HKD 8.207705
HNL 26.717966
HRK 7.521204
HTG 139.083693
HUF 407.428254
IDR 16707.527875
ILS 3.953204
IMP 0.832244
INR 89.019917
IQD 1385.823999
IRR 44381.713142
ISK 145.09392
JEP 0.832244
JMD 168.017516
JOD 0.747665
JPY 163.11606
KES 136.996819
KGS 91.207906
KHR 4274.035393
KMF 491.949854
KPW 948.946484
KRW 1468.131511
KWD 0.324266
KYD 0.881655
KZT 525.732457
LAK 23245.757353
LBP 94734.612531
LKR 309.064353
LRD 194.648693
LSL 19.246211
LTL 3.113326
LVL 0.637787
LYD 5.166884
MAD 10.546605
MDL 19.222107
MGA 4921.028776
MKD 61.620252
MMK 3424.602737
MNT 3582.801623
MOP 8.482871
MRU 42.233029
MUR 49.777883
MVR 16.289872
MWK 1834.492213
MXN 21.448266
MYR 4.709414
MZN 67.409471
NAD 19.246485
NGN 1757.428672
NIO 38.929431
NOK 11.673913
NPR 142.216383
NZD 1.797105
OMR 0.405569
PAB 1.057861
PEN 4.016068
PGK 4.25393
PHP 61.918744
PKR 293.731742
PLN 4.3158
PYG 8254.412497
QAR 3.856542
RON 4.977964
RSD 117.02535
RUB 105.312253
RWF 1453.024436
SAR 3.960277
SBD 8.846736
SCR 14.593034
SDG 634.226864
SEK 11.562232
SGD 1.41469
SHP 0.832244
SLE 23.837493
SLL 22109.940199
SOS 604.635005
SRD 37.236149
STD 21823.649537
SVC 9.256628
SYP 2649.174867
SZL 19.239748
THB 36.622995
TJS 11.277062
TMT 3.700893
TND 3.337655
TOP 2.469478
TRY 36.367477
TTD 7.183263
TWD 34.289139
TZS 2804.665046
UAH 43.699036
UGX 3882.590743
USD 1.054385
UYU 45.396692
UZS 13541.252969
VES 48.21917
VND 26755.030203
VUV 125.178757
WST 2.943413
XAF 656.097273
XAG 0.034399
XAU 0.000407
XCD 2.849529
XDR 0.796951
XOF 656.069267
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.464552
ZAR 19.109469
ZMK 9490.735335
ZMW 29.044695
ZWL 339.511677
  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.23

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    62.75

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.77

    +1.03%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    60.98

    +0.9%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.57

    +0.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0822

    24.44

    +0.34%

  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    140.09

    -0.19%

  • RELX

    -1.5000

    44.45

    -3.37%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    6.82

    +0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    26.82

    -0.07%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    13.1

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    -0.6509

    33.35

    -1.95%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    36.39

    +2.47%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    63.23

    -2.86%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    28.98

    -0.24%

Macron holds back on N. Caledonia voting reform after riots
Macron holds back on N. Caledonia voting reform after riots / Photo: Ludovic MARIN - POOL/AFP

Macron holds back on N. Caledonia voting reform after riots

President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday more talks were needed on proposed voting reforms that triggered over a week of deadly riots in New Caledonia, as he made a high-stakes visit to the French Pacific territory in a bid to ease tensions.

Text size:

Since May 13, looting, arson and clashes have left six people dead and hundreds injured. The unrest erupted over a French voting reform plan that indigenous Kanaks say will dilute their voice.

"I have pledged that this reform will not be forced through in the current context," Macron told reporters in New Caledonia's capital Noumea.

"We will allow some weeks to allow a calming of tensions and resumption of dialogue to find a broad accord" among all parties, he added, saying he would review the situation again within a month.

Caledonians would be asked to vote on their future if leaders can reach an over-arching agreement, Macron said. The voting reform had been approved by the French parliament lower house, but still needed final ratification.

The president stepped off a 24-hour flight on Thursday morning local time, arriving in Noumea in the wake of hundreds of police and military reinforcements dispatched from elsewhere in France.

New Caledonia has been ruled from Paris since the 1800s, but many indigenous Kanaks still resent France's power over their islands and want fuller autonomy or independence.

France had planned to give voting rights to thousands of non-indigenous long-term residents, something Kanaks say would dilute the influence of their votes.

Plans to expand the voter rolls to more recent arrivals have "breached the contract of trust", said Victor Gogny, president of New Caledonia's senate -- a consultative body that weighs in on issues affecting Kanaks.

- 'Unprecedented insurrection' -

Separatists have thrown up barricades that have cut off whole neighbourhoods and the main route to the international airport, which remains shuttered.

It had been a "totally unprecedented movement of insurrection," Macron said.

Nightly riots have seen scores of cars, schools, shops and businesses burned.

French authorities have imposed a state of emergency, placed separatist leaders under house arrest, banned alcohol sales and sent around 3,000 troops, police and other security reinforcements to quell the turmoil.

In a call in particular to Kanak representatives, Macron said all politicians needed to call "explicitly" for the lifting of the blockades put up in the "hours and days to come".

"Once these are withdrawn and this is confirmed the state of emergency will be lifted," he said.

Macron said security forces would "stay for as long as necessary, even during the Olympic and Paralympic Games" to be held in Paris in July-August.

- 'No longer up for discussion' -

New Caledonia boasts up to 30 percent of the world's nickel reserves and a strategic location.

China, the United States, New Zealand, Japan, Arab Gulf states and France are vying for influence across the South Pacific -- seeing it as crucial geopolitical real estate.

The archipelago, one of several French overseas territories that span the world's oceans, has on three occasions rejected independence in referendums.

But the last of those ballots took place during the Covid-19 pandemic and was boycotted by much of the Kanak population.

Macron ruled out going back on the result of the referendums, saying peace could not come at the cost of ignoring the will of the people or "somehow denying the road that has already been taken".

He last visited New Caledonia in July 2023, on a trip that was boycotted by Kanak representatives.

 

Out on the streets, AFP correspondents saw Kanaks still manning reinforced roadblocks on the day of Macron's visit, flying pro-independence flags and displaying protest banners against the electoral reform.

The draft law "doesn't exist to us any more, since people have died, it's no longer even up for discussion," said Lele, a 41-year-old mother in favour of independence.

But a heavy police presence was sheltering some semblance of normal life in central Noumea, where many shops had reopened to customers and long queues formed outside bakeries.

Hundreds of tourists from Australia and New Zealand have begun to flee although hundreds more remain trapped, with Macron's high-security visit doing nothing to speed up the process.

Australia's foreign ministry emailed travellers to say there would be no flights Thursday, while New Zealand announced a military plane would retrieve 43 people in the course of Friday.

R.Schmid--NZN