A - I n f o s

a multi-lingual news service by, for, and about anarchists **
News in all languages
Last 30 posts (Homepage) Last two weeks' posts Our archives of old posts

The last 100 posts, according to language
Greek_ 中文 Chinese_ Castellano_ Catalan_ Deutsch_ Nederlands_ English_ Francais_ Italiano_ Polski_ Português_ Russkyi_ Suomi_ Svenska_ Türkurkish_ The.Supplement

The First Few Lines of The Last 10 posts in:
Castellano_ Deutsch_ Nederlands_ English_ Français_ Italiano_ Polski_ Português_ Russkyi_ Suomi_ Svenska_ Türkçe_
First few lines of all posts of last 24 hours

Links to indexes of first few lines of all posts of past 30 days | of 2002 | of 2003 | of 2004 | of 2005 | of 2006 | of 2007 | of 2008 | of 2009 | of 2010 | of 2011 | of 2012 | of 2013 | of 2014 | of 2015 | of 2016 | of 2017 | of 2018 | of 2019 | of 2020 | of 2021 | of 2022 | of 2023 | of 2024 | of 2025

Syndication Of A-Infos - including RDF - How to Syndicate A-Infos
Subscribe to the a-infos newsgroups

(en) France, Monde Libertaire - News from Kanaky (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

Date Thu, 18 Dec 2025 08:52:37 +0200


"Kanaky independence is a political objective and also a philosophical and ethical necessity, aiming to restore the dignity and autonomy of a people who aspire to live in harmony with their history, culture, and environment." ---- This statement is from Yewa Waetheane, a Kanak independence activist arrested following the youth uprising in Nouméa in May 2024, imprisoned in France with six other Kanak activists, and then released last June with a travel ban. ---- After being interviewed on Radio Libertaire on September 22 (https://www.trousnoirs-radio-libertaire.org), Yewa wrote this text for Le Monde Libertaire online, in which he recounts more than 170 years of colonization in New Caledonia. ---- Kanaky: The State Perfects Its Colonization

Since September 24, 1853 (1), Kanaky has been subjected to a structured colonization based on specific mechanisms: land dispossession, forced labor, military repression, and racial codification. The application of the Indigenous Code in 1887 initially allowed for the organization of domination through law, and its abolition in January 1946 did not end the system, which simply modernized. From 1956 onward (2), the State replaced these brutal tools with statutes of "autonomy" that were not truly autonomous. Each text transferred symbolic powers but retained the essentials: sovereignty, justice, and public order remained under the control of the institutions. Domestic law became the primary tool for maintaining colonial rule.

Colonial Law and State Violence

When the Kanak people organized politically, Paris recentralized power and launched a massive population policy to disrupt the demographic balance, weaken the pro-independence vote, and reduce the indigenous population to a minority (3). This mechanism, designed to circumvent international law, aimed to create a "mixed" electoral population in order to make self-determination in accordance with UN standards impossible.

The successive statutes of the 1970s and 80s served the same strategy: to announce progress while neutralizing any real advancement. As soon as a text came too close to the right to independence, it was modified or abandoned. Even the official recognition of the "colonial fact" in 1983 (4) was immediately emptied of substance. To reaffirm who remained in control, the State then resorted to violence (state of emergency in January 1985, "Operation Victor," the military operation on the island of Ouvéa in May 1988).

Matignon Accords: Autonomy Under Tutelage

The boycotted 1987 referendum (5) illustrates another mechanism: domestic law organizes a democratic charade to fabricate colonial legitimacy. The Matignon Accords of June 1988 framed an autonomy under tutelage, where any transfer of powers depends on the State, constitutionally guaranteed in Articles 76 and 77. By confining Kanaky within a French constitutional framework, Paris provides itself with a legal shield; all international law relating to the right of peoples to self-determination takes a back seat to the Constitution, allowing the State to legally circumvent the spirit of decolonization while "formally" respecting its own laws. The perverse effects are clear: a manipulated population to stifle the indigenous majority, controlled institutions, biased referendums, limited autonomy, and the impossibility of a sovereign choice. Domestic law serves to legitimize domination, while international law is neutralized by constitutional mechanisms. Colonialism changes its tools, but not its objective: to prevent the Kanak people from fully exercising their right to self-determination.

Nouméa Accord, "electoral freeze"

With the Nouméa Accord (6), the State seemed to recognize the Kanak people's right to self-determination, but it immediately locked down the process by constitutionalizing the rules of the game: conditional transfers, referendums controlled by Paris. The electoral freeze (7) is not a "gift"; it is the bare minimum to prevent the settlement policy pursued since colonization from turning the referendum into a colonial farce. But even this mechanism, intended to protect the victims of history, is now a target, and the State is seeking to unlock it in order to restore electoral weight to an imported population, reconfigured and manufactured by a century of demographic colonization. The third referendum of December 12, 2021, was imposed despite the unanimous request for postponement from customary authorities, as Kanak families needed an extended period of mourning due to the Covid-19 pandemic. This demonstrates how domestic law is being used as a tool to circumvent the right of peoples to self-determination. The unilaterally decided timetable disregards local customs and traditions, and the absence of the indigenous people in the voting booth (56% abstention rate) effectively closes the case. Paris used its own legal framework to produce a result contrary to the spirit of decolonization while claiming to respect the legal framework.

The "Bougival Agreement," Demographic Engineering

The Bougival Agreement of July 12, 2025, rejected by the FLNKS on August 13, follows the same logic. Presented as a "break from the referendum cycle," it is in reality a tool to reintroduce demographic engineering into institutional law. By definitively opening the electorate, it eliminates one of the few remaining protective mechanisms and paves the way for a New Caledonia where the Kanak vote will once again be marginalized, not by political choice, but by constitutional decree. The State is using the force of its domestic law to neutralize a principle: the international right to self-determination. Bougival thus allows Paris to disguise this maneuver as "democratic modernization," when it is clearly a return to classic colonial tools: controlling institutions, redefining who has the right to vote, and creating an artificial electoral majority favorable to remaining within the Republic.

The FLNKS, a historical partner in the previous agreements, refuses to adhere to them because it sees precisely what is at stake: a confiscation of sovereignty through constitutional mechanisms, rendering independence legally unattainable. Thus, through domestic law, the State circumvents the decolonization stipulated by the UN and reconstructs a status in which Kanaky remains French not by popular choice, but by legal structure. What Paris can no longer impose by force, it locks down through domestic law, redefining who votes, when, and how, manipulating demographics to fabricate a majority, using referendums as weapons, and blocking self-determination behind constitutional articles to present manipulation as "dialogue," colonial engineering as "reform," and the confiscation of genuine sovereignty as "peace." Bougival is merely the ultimate expression of this strategy: neutralizing the Kanak people, circumventing international law, and maintaining Kanaky as French not through the will of the country, but through its legal framework. It must be stated unequivocally: as long as Paris decides who counts as a citizen, who can vote, and within what framework the country's future is determined, Kanaky will remain trapped in a system designed to last. Beneath its legal veneer, France is not ending colonization; it is perfecting it.

Faced with this cold, calculating machine, one fact remains, stubborn and unalterable: no people has ever renounced its right to political existence.

The Kanak people are not asking for permission to become sovereign; they are simply reminding France that no legal framework can erase its legitimacy or indefinitely stifle its march toward independence.

Yewa Waetheane

Notes
(1) Rear Admiral Febvrier-Despointes takes possession of New Caledonia in the name of Emperor Napoleon III. A penal colony is established there the following year.

(2) June 23, 1956: Gaston Defferre's framework law creates a territorial assembly and a local governing council.

(3) In 1972, Prime Minister Pierre Messmer advocated various measures to avert the danger of a "nationalist movement by the indigenous population by improving the numerical balance of the communities": "mass immigration of metropolitan French citizens," "systematic immigration of women and children," and "reserving jobs for immigrants in private companies."

(4) July 1984: The Nainville-les-Roches Round Table recognized the Kanak people's "innate and active right to independence" and referred to them as "victims of history."

(5) Since the requirement for participation was only three years of residency, pro-independence supporters called for a boycott: of the 50.1% of voters, 98% favored remaining within the French Republic.

(6) May 5, 1998: The French State transferred powers to New Caledonia, with the exception of defense, security, justice, and currency.

A referendum on independence is planned, followed by a second and then a third if the first fails.

(7) Residents of New Caledonia before 1998, as well as their descendants, are eligible to vote, provided they have resided in the territory for ten consecutive years beforehand.

https://monde-libertaire.net/?articlen=8696
_________________________________________
A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E
By, For, and About Anarchists
Send news reports to A-infos-en mailing list
A-infos-en@ainfos.ca
Subscribe/Unsubscribe https://ainfos.ca/mailman/listinfo/a-infos-en
Archive: http://ainfos.ca/en
A-Infos Information Center