New Caledonia In response to the unrest, pro-independence
President of the Government of New Caledonia Louis Mapou called for a "return to reason". Meanwhile, the FLNKS called for "calm, peace, stability and reason", the lifting of blockades and the withdrawal of the controversial French constitutional amendments. He also appealed to French President Emmanuel Macron to prioritise a comprehensive agreement between "all political leaders of New Caledonia, to pave the way for the archipelago's long-term political future". On 22 May, the New Caledonian government confirmed that telecom services had thwarted an "unprecedented" mass email cyber attack on a New Caledonian internet provider, which occurred shortly after Macron had announced his visit to the territory. During
Bastille Day on 14 July, Southern Province President
Sonia Backès gave a controversial speech criticising the
Nouméa Accord and advocating partitioning New Caledonia along provincial lines in light of the 2024 unrest. While Southern Province is ruled by pro-loyalist parties, the Northern and Loyalty Islands Provinces are ruled by pro-independence parties. Backès' speech was criticised by the pro-independence
FLNKS political bureau spokesperson
Aloisio Sako and
Party of Kanak Liberation spokesperson
Judickaël Selefen. By contrast, her speech was praised by vice-president of the Southern Province
Virginie Ruffenach, who advocated a return to the provincial autonomy arrangement between 1988 and 1998. On 29 August, the first Kanak
President of the Congress of New Caledonia Roch Wamytan of the separatist
FLNKS was replaced by
Veylma Falaeo of the centrist
Oceanian Awakening with a 28–26 vote. On 22 October, the
Congress of New Caledonia voted to postpone provincial elections scheduled for mid-December 2024 till at least 30 November 2025. This move was expected to be endorsed by the French Senate on 23 October and French National Assembly on 6 November.
Metropolitan France On 16 May, Emmanuel Macron indicated that he would delay convening the upcoming Congress of the French Parliament until at least June 2024 "to give a chance for dialogue and consensus". He also extended an invitation to New Caledonian political leaders to attend a meeting in Paris to cover various including the constitutional amendments around franchise extension and the current economic crisis in the nickel industry sector. The Paris meeting is scheduled to take place in late May 2024 under the supervision of
French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal. which French authorities said had previously been used to organize riots. On 16 May, Macron declared a
state of emergency in New Caledonia. On 19 May,
Radio New Zealand reported that Attal was chairing daily meetings of an "inter-ministerial crisis cell" which included also Interior Minister Darmanin,
Minister of the Overseas Marie Guévenoux,
Minister of the Armed Forces Sébastien Lecornu and
Minister of Justice Éric Dupond-Moretti. In addition, Attal also chaired a parliamentary "liaison committee" on New Caledonia on 17 May, which was attended by New Caledonian parliamentary representatives and parliamentary groups specialising on the Pacific territory. RNZ also reported that the French government had plans to send a "dialogue mission" to New Caledonia to restore dialogue and trust between Paris and the New Caledonians. On 19 May, French High Commissioner Louis Le Franc announced that 600 security personnel were being deployed in an operation to regain control of the highway area between Nouméa and its international airport including removing roadblocks and debris. By 19 May, French forces had broken through 60 roadblocks along the Route Territorial 1. On 20 May, French High Commissioner Louis Le Franc announced that French security forces would be launching new raids against pro-independence strongholds across New Caledonia. Le Franc also confirmed that customs officials had secured 103 containers of food and medicine at Nouméa's port. In early June 2024, French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin confirmed that the National Gendarmerie had deployed several armoured vehicles known as "Centaurs" to New Caledonia for the purposes of breaking road blocks and reestablishing public order. These Centaur armoured cars can be equipped with machine guns and tear gas canisters. High Commissioner Louis Le Franc confirmed that voting for the
2024 European Parliament elections would go ahead in New Caledonia and that a curfew as well as a ban on the sales of firearms and alcohol would be imposed during the voting period. In mid October 2024, French
Minister of the Overseas François-Noël Buffet undertook a four-day visit to New Caledonia to urge both pro and anti-independence parties to return to dialogue. His visit also focused on the economic impact of the crisis and French socio-economic assistance to the territory. While pro-independence parties have favoured various degrees of independence including partnership with France, anti-independence parties were reluctant to commit to talks unless law and order was fully restored to New Caledonia. Following Buffet's return to France, President Macron chaired a high-level French government meeting that was attended by Buffet,
Prime Minister Michel Barnier,
President of the National Assembly Yaël Braun-Pivet and
President of the Senate Gérard Larcher to discuss the views of both camps on the territory's future. Pivet and Larcher are expected to head a high-level delegation to the New Caledonia. Macron has also expressed interest in meeting with New Caledonian leaders in November 2024. On 12 February, Valls confirmed that he would visit New Caledonia on 22 February to pursue talks on the territory's future. In mid February 2025, French ambassador to the Pacific
Véronique Roger-Lacan confirmed that Valls would discuss unfreezing New Caledonia's electoral roll during talks in Nouméa. Valls's visit to New Caledonia took place between 22 February and 1 March 2025. During the visit, he convened a conference of both pro-independence and anti-independence parties. Following his visit, Valls published a "synthesis document" summing up both camps' views, which is intended to serve as the working basis for further talks. Valls confirmed that the parties had not yet reached an agreement. Valls subsequently returned for a second round of talks in late March 2025. Following ten days of negotiations at a hotel in
Bougival on the outskirts of
Paris, pro and anti-independence parties reached a historical accord known as the "Agreement Project of the Future of New Caledonia" on 13 July under the auspices of the French President Macron. Under the accord, the territory would become a "State of New Caledonia" within France with dual citizenship. While New Caledonia would gain limited foreign affairs, policing and public order responsibilities, France would still retain responsibility for defence, currency and justice. In addition, New Caledonia's electoral roll would be opened to all New Caledonian residents born after 1998 and their descendants if they had resident in the territory continuously for ten years or were married or in a de-facto relationship with a qualified citizen for at least five years. New Caledonia would hold a referendum in February 2026 to approve the accord. If approved, the agreement would then be incorporated into a "special organic law" passed by the
Congress of New Caledonia. The agreement would then have to be approved by the
French Parliament and enshrined into the
Constitution of France. The agreement would also focus on the territory's economic recovery following the unrest. Pro-French leaders including
Nicolas Metzdorf and Le Rassemblement leader
Virginie Ruffenach welcomed the agreement as a compromise framework that would New Caledonia to remain French. Meanwhile, the pro-independence
Melanesian Progressive Union negotiator Victor Tutugoro and FLNKS chief negotiator Emmanuel Tjibaou also welcomed the agreement as a compromise in their long-term goal of achieving independence and self determination for New Caledonia. Pro-independence activists in other overseas regions of France such as the Martinican Party for the Liberation from Martinique, the
Decolonization and Social Emancipation Movement (MDES) from Guiana, as well as several Guadeloupean pro-independence organizations have expressed support for Kanak protestors. Polynesian deputy member of the French National Assembly
Tematai Le Gayic said: "That which calls out to me (...), is that this assembly that should, during this mandate, decide the constitutional future of my
country doesn't recognize the position of the first peoples". While Guianan deputy
Jean-Victor Castor warned: "We're not in the presence of a social movement similar to
that set off by the pension reform law, we're dealing with a people demanding their full sovereignty" and "whether you want it or not, Kanaky was independent before the arrival of French colonists!." On 18 May, Wong confirmed that Australia was working with French, New Caledonian and New Zealand authorities to evacuate Australians stranded in the territory. An estimated 3,200 tourists and other travellers including 300 Australians remain stranded in New Caledonia. On 20 May, Wong confirmed that the
Australian Defence Force was ready to send planes to evacuate stranded tourists, pending approval from New Caledonian authorities and the resumption of commercial flights. • : On 27 May,
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning confirmed that it was monitoring the situation in New Caledonia and had directed Chinese embassies in France, Australia, New Zealand and Singapore to assist with the evacuation of Chinese nationals stranded by the conflict. Eighteen Chinese nationals left the territory on 26 May with the assistance of the French Government. • : On 15 May,
Prime Minister and outgoing
Pacific Islands Forum chair
Mark Brown described the unrest as a "cause to recognise greater autonomy and greater independence from the people on those islands". He also stated that the Cook Islands would provide support assistance to Forum members New Caledonia and French Polynesia to avoid any escalation of conflict. • and : On 22 June, the two governments introduced a motion to the
United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization calling for peace in New Caledonia. • : On 14 May,
Foreign Minister Winston Peters cancelled plans to visit New Caledonia in response to the unrest. National carrier
Air New Zealand also stated it was monitoring the situation in the territory ahead of its next flight to Nouméa at 08:25 on 18 May. Following the closure of
La Tontouta International Airport, the airline cancelled its flights to Nouméa scheduled for 18 and 20 May. The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed that 219 New Zealanders were registered with Safe Travel in New Caledonia. Peters confirmed that the Government was exploring ways of evacuating New Zealanders including deploying the
Royal New Zealand Air Force. While the New Zealand Consulate General remained open, staff were working remotely due to safety concerns. On 20 May New Zealand announced a flight on 21 May to evacuate 50 New Zealand nationals from Nouméa. On 23 May a further 50 passengers were repatriated back to Auckland on a RNZAF
Boeing 757, who had travelled from Nouméa to Brisbane on a French-operated flight. On 24 May a third flight took place, returning another 50 New Zealanders on a C130. By 27 May, the NZDF had evacuated 300 people from New Caledonia. The final NZDF flight took place the following day on 28 May to evacuate about 20 New Zealand citizens. • :
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Maria Zakharova rejected claims of foreign interference in the New Caledonia unrest and urged France to "look at its own deep-down problems". Zakharova stated that Russia regarded New Caledonia as a non-self governing territory that had not yet completed the process of decolonisation and called on France to "refrain from an unjustified use of force against the protesters and respect the rights and liberties of the indigenous population of New Caledonia and other overseas territories under its control." • :
Colin Beck, the Permanent Secretary of Foreign Affairs, said that using military force was not a method to resolve issues, and it could prevent indigenous Kanak people from expressing their rights. • : On 17 May,
Prime Minister Charlot Salwai, the concurrent Chair of the
intergovernmental organization Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG), reaffirmed the MSG's support for the FLNKS's opposition to France's constitutional bill "unfreezing" New Caledonia's electoral roll. It also opposed proposed changes to the citizens' electorate and the distribution of seats in New Caledonia's Congress. Salwai endorsed the FLNKS's call for calm and condemnation of violence. He also warned that the indiscriminate destruction of property would adversely affect New Caledonia's economy and the "welfare and lives of all New Caledonians, including the Kanaks."
Pacific Islands Forum Following the outbreak of unrest, Vanuatu Prime Minister
Charlot Salwai urged France to accept an FLNKS proposal to establish a "dialogue and mediation mission" to discuss how peace and normalcy could be restored to the territory. In response to the MSG's statement, senior French diplomat Véronique Roger-Lacan sought to reassure
Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) leaders of the fairness of the
2021 New Caledonian independence referendum and claimed there was much disinformation about New Caledonia among Pacific countries. She criticised the PIF president
Mark Brown's decision to contact New Caledonian President
Louis Mapou while ignoring France, which she said still had sovereignty over the territory. Brown confirmed that the PIF was preparing to send a high-level Pacific delegation consisting of the leaders of Fiji, Cook Islands, Tonga and Solomon Islands to investigate conditions in New Caledonia. On 30 August 2024, Brown confirmed that both the Pacific Island Forum and France had agreed to the terms of reference for a PIF fact finding mission to New Caledonia consisting of the Forum troika and
Fijian President Sitiveni Rabuka. New Caledonia and
French Polynesia have been members of the Forum since 2016. The fact finding mission had been requested by Mapou. In late October 2024, the Pacific Islands Forum confirmed that its troika mission to New Caledonia would take place between 27 and 29 October. The Forum leaders would be supported by Forum Secretary General
Baron Waqa and senior French and New Caledonian officials. The delegation toured Nouméa and visited New Caledonian political parties, youth, private sector, health and education leaders in order to understand local perspectives and help the Fourum support ongoing dialogue about the territory's future. At the request of the French government, the mission would remains trictly observational. On 29 October, New Caledonia President Mapou and government spokesperson Charles Wea welcomed the troika's visit. Protestant Church of Kanaky New Caledonia leader Billy Wetewea told the troika mission that the Kanaks were "battling inequities in education, employment and health". By contrast, the Loyalists claimed that the Kanaks were neither marginalised nor mistreated. The troika mission's findings are expected to be presented at the next Forum leaders' meeting in 2025.
United Nations In mid-August 2024,
United Nations special rapporteurs issued a statement accusing the French Government of seeking to dismantle the Nouméa Accord by seeking to unfreeze the electoral roll and introducing the "Marty project," which they claimed would dismnatle recognition of Kanak indigenous identity, customary law and land rights. The rapporteurs criticised the French Government for failing to respect the Kanaks' rights to participation, consultation and informed consent. They also expressed concern that French authorities had not taken action to disband and prosecute anti-independence settler militias. UN special rapporteurs are independent experts mandated by the
United Nations Human Rights Council to report to the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR). In mid-October 2024, the New Caledonia unrest was the subject of the
United Nations Human Rights Committee's five-yearly French human rights review in
Geneva. Portuguese committee member
Jose Santo Pais criticised what he regarded as France's heavy-handed response and questioned France's commitment to the UN
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Nouméa Accord. Serbian committee member
Tijana Surlan requested an update from France on investigations into injuries and fatalities "related to alleged excessive use of force" in the territory. Togorian committee member
Kobauyah Tchamdja Kapatcha also asked about the alleged intimidation of five journalists by French authorities in New Caledonia. The French delegation led by French Ambassador for Human Rights
Isabelle Lonvis-Rome defended the actions of French authorities in New Caledonia and rejected the jurisdiction of the United Nations' decolonization process into its Pacific territories.
Non-state organisations •
Amnesty International's Pacific Researcher Kate Schuetze issued a statement on 17 May calling on French authorities to uphold the rights of the Kanak people to freedom of expression and assembly amidst the unrest. Amnesty International also urged the French Government not to use the state of emergency, military deployment and the TikTok ban to restrict peoples' rights. • The
Catholic Archbishop of Nouméa Michel-Marie Calvet said during the
Day of Pentecost Sunday mass that the community had "betrayed our faith, our baptism and Jesus through its divisions." He also called on the public and leaders to denounce violence and to work together for a "shared peaceful future, of lost and found fraternity". PRNGOs also called for the
United Nations and the Pacific Islands Forum leaders to send a neutral mission to facilitate dialogue over the Nouméa Accords of 1998 and political process. • Several Pacific NGOs including the Australia West Papua Association, the
United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP), Kia Mua and the Oceanian Independence Movement (OIM) issued statements supporting the Kanak people and FLNKS, and condemning French colonialism and alleged racism. • On 13 June, a New Zealand opposition party
Te Pāti Māori (Māori Party) issued a press release stating that it "stood with the people of Kanaky who are fighting for their independence and their lives against oppressive French occupation." ==See also==