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French Polynesian president asks UN to bring France into decolonization talks

Updated: Oct 15

Any United Nations role in negotiating the territory’s self-determination aspirations is rejected by France



By Stefan Armbruster


(Benar News)-- French Polynesia’s president and civil society leaders have called on the United Nations to bring France to the negotiating table and set a timetable for the decolonization of the Pacific territory.


More than a decade after the archipelago was re-listed for decolonization by the U.N. General Assembly, France has refused to acknowledge the world’s peak diplomatic organization has a legitimate role.


France’s reputation has taken a battering as an out-of-touch colonial power since deadly violence erupted in New Caledonia in May, sparked by a now abandoned French government attempt to dilute the voting power of indigenous Kanak people.


Pro-independence French Polynesian President Moetai Brotherson told the U.N. Decolonization Committee’s annual meeting in New York on Monday that “after a decade of silence” France must be “guided” to participate in “dialogue.”

“Our government’s full support for a comprehensive, transparent and peaceful decolonization process with France, under the scrutiny of the United Nations, can pave the way for a decolonization process that serves as an example to the world,” Brotherson said.


Brotherson called for France to finally cooperate in creating a roadmap and timeline for the decolonization process, pointing to unrest in New Caledonia that “reminds us of the delicate balance that peace requires.”


In August, he warned France “always had a problem with decolonization” in the Pacific, where it also controls the territories of New Caledonia and Wallis and Futuna. 


The 121 islands of French Polynesia stretch over a vast expanse of the Pacific, with a population of about 280,000, and were first settled more than 2,000 years ago. 


Often referred to as Tahiti after the island with the biggest population, France declared the archipelago a protectorate in 1842, followed by full annexation in 1880.


France last year attended the U.N. committee for the first time since the territory’s re-inscription in 2013 as awaiting decolonization, after decades of campaigning by French Polynesian politicians.


Moetai Brotherson/Photo courtesy of PINA

"I would like to clarify once again that this change of method does not imply a change of policy,” French permanent representative to the U.N. Nicolas De Rivière told the committee on Monday.


“There is no process between the state and the Polynesian territory that reserves a role for the United Nations,” he said and pointed out France contributes almost 2 billion euros (U.S. $2.2 billion) each year, or almost 30 percent of the territory's GDP.


After the U.N. session, Brotherson told the media that France’s position is “off the mark."


French Polynesia was initially listed for decolonization by the U.N. in 1946 but removed a year later as France fought to hold onto its overseas territories after the Second World War.


Granted limited autonomy in 1984, with control over local government services, France retained administration over justice, security, defense, foreign policy and the currency.


Seventeen pro-independence and four pro-autonomy – who support the status quo – speakers gave impassioned testimony to the committee.


Lawyer and Protestant church spokesman Philippe Neuffer highlighted children in the territory “solely learn French and Western history.”

“They deserve the right to learn our complete history, not the one centered on the French side of the story,” he said.


“Talking about the nuclear tests without even mentioning our veterans’ history and how they fought to get a court to condemn France for poisoning people with nuclear radiation.”


France conducted 193 nuclear tests over three decades until 1996 in French Polynesia.


“Our lands are contaminated, our health compromised and our spirits burned,” Tevaerai Puarai, president of the Mururoa E Tatou Association, told the U.N. denouncing it as French “nuclear colonialism.”


“We demand justice. We demand freedom,” Puarai said.


He said France needed to take full responsibility for its “nuclear crimes," referencing a controversial 10-year compensation deal reached in 2009.


Some Māʼohi indigenous people, many French residents and descendants in the territory fear independence and the resulting loss of subsidies would devastate the local economy and public services.


Tepuaraurii Teriitahi, pro-autonomy local Assembly member, told the committee, “French Polynesia is neither oppressed nor exploited by France.”


“The idea that we could find 2 billion a year to replace this contribution on our own is an illusion that would lead to the impoverishment and downfall of our hitherto prosperous country,” she said.


(Republished with permission of Benar News)




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