12 Nov 2021

France keeps December 12 date for New Caledonia's independence referendum

6:18 pm on 12 November 2021

The French High Commissioner in New Caledonia Patrice Faure has just announced the December 12 date for the independence referendum will be maintained.

New Caledonia's pro-independence parties had called on Paris to postpone the plebiscite to the second half of 2022 because of the impact of the Covid-19 outbreak, which has claimed more than 270 lives.

The French High Commissioner, Patrice Faure welcomes health workers from mainland France to New Caledonia

The French High Commissioner in New Caledonia Patrice Faure Photo: Clotilde Richalet / Hans Lucas

The pro-independence parties said they won't respect the result of the independence referendum, if France maintains December 12 as the date of the vote.

The parties said with a Kanak population in mourning, the situation isn't conducive to run a proper referendum campaign.

The latest announcement by the French High Commissioner has been welcomed by the anti-independence parties.

The anti-independence camp want the December date to be maintained, saying New Caledonia needs clarity.

Two previous referendums, in 2018 and 2020, were won by anti-independence supporters.

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