Separatists in riot-hit New Caledonia on Monday refused to abandon road blocks that have paralysed the Pacific archipelago for a week, in defiance of a major security operation by French forces.
France has sent 1,000 security forces to its overseas territory that has been rocked by seven nights of violence that have left six dead, including two gendarmes, and hundreds injured.
President Emmanuel Macron was due to chair a new meeting of his defence and security council on Monday evening.
Prime Minister Gabriel Attal warned that “there is still a long way to go before things return to normal” in New Caledonia.
The latest unrest in the Pacific territory of 270,000 people erupted over French plans to impose new rules that would give tens of thousands of non-indigenous residents voting rights.
Some 600 heavily armed French police and paramilitaries destroyed 76 road blocks on the 60-kilometre (40-mile) route between the capital Noumea and La Tontouta International Airport, officials said.
But pro-independence largely indigenous Kanak activists vowed they would not give up. AFP journalists said some road blocks taken down by security forces were being rebuilt even bigger by pro-independence forces.
A pickup truck drove through one Noumea suburb with about 10 masked and hooded men wielding machetes, AFP correspondents said.
Anti-riot blast balls, often used to release tear gas or pepper spray, could be heard in one Noumea suburb. Fire reduced one construction firm’s building to cinders.
“It feels like being in The Walking Dead,” said local post office director Thomas de Deckker, referring to the post-apocalyptic zombie television series.
“We have no visibility of when we will have security again,” he told AFP.
Sonia Lagarde, the mayor of Noumea, speaking to French daily Le Monde, said the approval of the reform by both houses of French parliament should be postponed. “I think the president has understood that,” she said.
The government heads of four other French overseas territories — La Reunion in the Indian Ocean, Guadeloupe and Martinique in the Caribbean and French Guiana in South America — on Sunday called for the voting reform to be withdrawn altogether to avoid “civil war”.
Airport to remain closed
Noumea airport will remain closed to commercial flights until Thursday, the airport managers said.
Military aircraft carrying the remains of two gendarmes killed in New Caledonia landed in France early on Monday.
“Their names were Nicolas Molinari and Xavier Salou,” Attal said on X. “The whole nation bows before their coffins.”
“The situation remains precarious, even though it is improving,” interior ministry spokeswoman Camille Chaize told broadcaster BFMTV on Monday.
The Ground Action Coordination Cell, or CCAT, said it was “maintaining” barricades in place. Some CCAT leaders are under house arrest on suspicion of organising the troubles.
Roadblocks would be closed to all vehicles during night curfews except for health emergencies and firefighters, the group said.
Indigenous Kanaks had suffered from discrimination for too long, it said. The group insisted it sought a peaceful resolution but criticised the French “colonial state” plan to expand voting rights.
‘The islands are on fire’
“The islands are on fire, for sure, but we have to remember that they tried to be heard for a long time and it led to nothing,” said one resident, Laloua Savea.
“It had to degenerate for the state to see us, for the politicians to see us,” she said.
Authorities say about 230 people have been detained while an estimated 3,200 people are stuck in New Caledonia or unable to return to the archipelago, which lies more than 1,000 kilometres (800 miles) east of Australia.
Attal is considering extending the state of emergency — under which the curfew was imposed and TikTok banned — beyond its initial 12 days. That would require the approval of both houses in the French parliament.
On Monday, the New Caledonian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (CCI) said the troubles had caused “catastrophic” economic damage. It said 150 businesses have been “looted and set on fire”.
New Caledonia has been a French territory since the mid-1800s.
Almost two centuries on, its politics remain dominated by debate about whether the islands should be part of France, autonomous or independent — with opinions split roughly along ethnic lines.
Indigenous Kanaks make up about 40 percent of the population but tend to be poorer. Kanak groups say the latest voting regulations would dilute the indigenous vote.
Civil liberties groups have challenged the TikTok ban, with a hearing scheduled at France’s top administrative court in Paris for Tuesday.
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