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Publish Date: Wed, 22 May 2024, 11:46 AM
- Protesters erect new barricades overnight
- Local officials say riots have ebbed but not over
- Macron to visit New Caledonia on Thursday
- Aims to ease tensions after over a week of riots
SYDNEY/PARIS, May 22 (Reuters) - Protesters in New Caledonia erected new barricades overnight in "cat-and-mouse" games with French police reinforcements ahead of the arrival of President Emmanuel Macron, after the worst riots on the French-ruled Pacific island in 40 years.
Macron is due to land in the French overseas territory early on Thursday for talks after government electoral reforms passed last week sparked violence that has killed six people and left a trail of destruction including looted shops and torched cars and buildings.
The protesters fear the reforms will dilute the votes of indigenous Kanaks, who make up 40% of the island's population versus 24% who identify as European, according to a 2019 census.
The riots have calmed down but are not over, local officials said. Reuters drone footage showed smoke rising above damaged buildings in the capital Noumea, as well as burning road blockades and continued clashes between protesters and police.
"The police forces go around clearing these barricades but right after that, the youths put them up again, so it's almost a cat-and-mouse game," said Jimmy Naouna, from the Front de Liberation Nationale Kanak et Socialiste (FLNKS).
The pro-independence FLNKS had called for protesters to remove roadblocks that restrict movement and food supplies in Noumea, though they continued to appear overnight, Naouna told Reuters in an interview.
Much now hinges on what Macron will say and do during his visit.
Aides say Macron has no pre-conceived plan and will talk with all parties about reconstruction in the wake of the riots, as well as about politics, but is unlikely to rush into any major decision.
EXPECTATIONS
This may disappoint some local groups, including FLNKS, who want Macron to shelve the electoral reform.
"We are expecting that if he (Macron) travels to Kanaky he will make some strong announcement that he is withdrawing this electoral bill, but if he is just coming here as a provocation that might just turn bad," Naouna said, using the island's indigenous name.
Calls to scrap the bill - or at least postpone its ratification - come not only from the pro-independence camp.
Noumea Mayor Sonia Lagarde, a member of Macron's Renaissance party, described her city as "under siege".
Lagarde told France 2 TV she hoped Macron's visit would help "cool things down" and that he would announce a postponement of a joint session of France's National Assembly and Senate that is required to ratify the electoral reform.
Asked what he hoped from Macron's visit, Yoan Fleurot, a local naval mechanics business owner, said: "A return to order."
New Caledonia's Pacific neighbours have repeatedly urged Macron to listen to the island's leaders and calm a situation they say worries them. New Zealand and Australia have started to evacuate tourists from the island.
"I think the gesture of President Macron travelling there is an important one, and we just urge both sides to support the Noumea Accords," Australia's Pacific minister Pat Conroy told ABC Television.
Electoral rolls were frozen in 1998 under the Noumea Accord, which ended a decade of violence and established a pathway to gradual autonomy, which critics say has now been derailed.
'MOBILISED AND CONFIDENT'
The Field Action Coordination Cell (CCAT), organiser of the protests, called on social media for demonstrators to display Kanak flags and banners opposing the electoral amendment.
"We don't know what Macron and his team are coming to do but we remain mobilised and confident for Kanaky," it said.
France annexed New Caledonia in 1853 and gave the colony the status of overseas territory in 1946. It is the world's No. 3 nickel miner but the sector is in crisis and one in five residents lives below the poverty threshold.
The electoral reform would allow French residents who have lived in New Caledonia for 10 years to vote in provincial elections - a move Paris says is needed to improve democracy.
The island is more than 16,000 km (10,000 miles) from mainland France and 1,500 km (930 miles) east of Australia.
Meanwhile, the New Caledonia government said a large cyber attack launched soon after the announcement of Macron's visit - and now ended - had aimed to make internet services unavailable, with millions of emails sent to one address.
Government official Christopher Gyges told BFM TV most of the IP addresses involved in the attack originated in Russia.
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https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/new-caledonia-protesters-police-play-cat-mouse-before-macron-arrives-2024-05-22/