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Nouméa Accord

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The Nouméa Accord (French: Accord de Nouméa) of 1998 is a promise by the French Republic to grant increased political power to New Caledonia and its indigenous population, the Kanaks, over a twenty-year transition period. It was signed 5 May 1998 by Lionel Jospin, and approved in a referendum in New Caledonia on 8 November, with 72% voting in favour. Under the accord, three more referendum votes, on whether to remain a special collectivity of France or become an independent state, have been held.

One was held in 2018, and the second was held in 2020. In both votes, a majority chose to remain French. The Nouméa Accord permitted a final referendum to be held, voted for by the Congress of New Caledonia. It was held December 2021 and widely rejected independence amid boycott by the independence movement.[1][2]

Under the Nouméa Accord, France has continued to control the military, foreign policy, immigration, the police and the currency. France will continue to do so, the vote having rejected becoming an independent state in 2021.

Named after New Caledonia's capital and largest city, the Nouméa Accord was the second accord, following the Matignon Agreements (1988).

Under the conditions of the agreement , the Vice President of New Caledonia must be a pro-independence politician if the Presidency is held by an anti-independence politician.[3][4]

Signatories

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The following people signed the Nouméa Accord on 5 May 1998:

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A popular consultation for approval was organised in New Caledonia on Sunday, 8 November 1998.

Campaign

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The local political class was divided on the question of the agreement.

The following political figures and parties called for a "yes" vote for reasons were are often diametrically opposed between supporters and opponents of independence:

  • the two main signatories, Jacques Lafleur's RPCR (which focuses on "at least 20 years of peace and stability" and a "future in the Republic") and Rock Wamytan's FLNKS (on behalf of the general interest of the country and future generations "),
  • the other two independentist movements, of moderate tradition, represented in the institutions, the Socialist Kanak Liberation Party (LKS) of Nidoïsh Naisseline ("the future of our country is at stake") and the Federation of Committees Coordinating Independents (FCCI) of Raphaël Mapou, Leopold Jorédié and François Burck ("yes to the long march of the men and women of this country, the yes to our common history so that it does not stop").
  • the various mayors of Bourail and Dumbéa, respectively Jean-Pierre Aïfa and Bernard Marant, long-time opponents of the RPCR.
  • Delin Wema, a former Kanak RPCR executive in the North Province who became one of the leading figures in a new party, Developing Together to Build the Future (DECA),.
  • Thierry Valet and Jean-Claude Legras, two members of Congress from Une Nouvelle-Calédonie pour tous (UNCT, an organisation created by dissidents from RPCR that subsequently became the principal opposition to Jacques Lafleur within the anti-independence camp) who put themselves at odds with the official position of their movement (for them, the "Yes... reconciles at the same time the respect of the others, of their culture, their way of life and the necessary mobilization of all energies to develop the economy of New Caledonia to guarantee social progress and full employment").

The "no" side featured:

  • the two main moderate anti-independence parties in opposition to RPCR: Dider Leroux's UNCT, which saw agreement as paving the way for a "banana republic", reinforcing the hegemony of the RPCR over local political life and DECA, led by Koumac Mayor Robert Frouin, who presented the text as a "deceit" and a "Spanish farm where everyone finds what he wants to find" and highlighted the differences of interpretation between the interpretations of the RPCR and the FLNKS.
  • on the right, RPCR members who opposed autonomy, Guy George's local section of the National Front (FN) as Guy George ("I urge you to refuse abandonment and vote no") and Claude Sarran's Movement for France (MPF) (denouncing a "collusion agreement" between "the socialist government to get rid of New Caledonia, the RPCR to extend its political-financial hegemony through transfers of powers and the FLNKS to satisfy its desire for independence"), as well as former RPCR Dick Ukeiwé,
  • on the left of the FLNKS, Louis Kotra Uregi's Union syndicale des travailleurs kanaks et des exploités (USTKE), which wanted immediate independence.

Results

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Results of referendum

  Yes (71.86%)
  No (28.14%)

Approuvez-vous l'Accord sur la Nouvelle-Calédonie signé à Nouméa le 5 Mai 1998?


"Do you approve of the New Caledonia Agreement signed in Noumea on 5 May 1998?"

— The referendum question
Options Number % of registered % of voters % of cast ballots
Yes 55,400 51.92 69.95 71.86
No 21,697 20.33 27.39 28.14
Votes cast 77,097 72.26 97.34 100.00
Blank or spoiled votes 2,105 1.97 2.66
Total number of voters 79,202 74.23 100.00
Abstentions 27,496 25.77
Registered 106,698 100.00

Source : Décision du 9 novembre 1998 proclamant les résultats de la consultation des populations de la Nouvelle-Calédonie du dimanche 8 novembre 1998

See also

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Further reading

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  • Carine David, Victor David. 2020. "New Caledonia." in Gems of the Pacific.


References

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  1. ^ "Paris meeting to prepare New Caledonia independence vote". Archived from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  2. ^ "New Caledonia rejects independence in final vote amid boycott". Reuters. 12 December 2021. Archived from the original on 1 January 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2021.
  3. ^ "New Caledonia to try again to choose vice-president". Radio New Zealand International. 14 June 2009. Archived from the original on 27 May 2012. Retrieved 14 June 2009.
  4. ^ "Ngaiohni elected new New Caledonia vice president". Radio New Zealand International. 15 June 2009. Archived from the original on 27 May 2012. Retrieved 15 June 2009.
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