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Polynesia in decolonization list; Pacific islands proposal supported by 193 votes in UN General Assembly

Monday, May 20th 2013 - 02:37 UTC
Full article 58 comments
Pro-independence leader Oscar Temaru (R) and pro-autonomy Gaston Flosse  who won the latest election Pro-independence leader Oscar Temaru (R) and pro-autonomy Gaston Flosse who won the latest election

The UN General Assembly on Friday put French Polynesia on the global body's decolonization list at a meeting boycotted by France. The resolution, passed by consensus in the 193 member assembly, was called for by the Solomon Islands and other Pacific states that back the Pacific territory's pro-independence parties.

The vote places French Polynesia on the UN decolonization list along with 16 other territories around the world, including the British-ruled Falkland Islands and the US Virgin Islands.

The resolution “affirms the right of the people of French Polynesia to self-determination and independence.” It calls on the French government to “facilitate rapid progress” towards self-determination.

Though the move is largely symbolic, Britain, the United States, Germany and the Netherlands all disassociated themselves from the consensus vote.

France sent a letter to other UN members on Thursday announcing it would not be taking part in the debate.

“The right to self-determination cannot be exercised against the will of the concerned populations,” said the French mission to the UN in the letter.

Polynesia's pro-independence party asked for the territory to be put back on the UN list when it controlled the government in 2011.

But the pro-independence lost an election this month and the government is now controlled by a party that backs the existing autonomy granted by France.

The UN vote was held on the day that independence leader Oscar Temaru handed over the presidency to the pro-autonomy Gaston Flosse. The territory's assembly passed a resolution on Wednesday calling for the UN vote to be postponed.

France annexed different parts of Polynesia during the 19th century. The territory of about 275,000 people is best known now for tourist island of Tahiti and for the French nuclear tests carried out there up to the mid-1990s.

It was on the UN decolonization list from 1946 until 1986.

Solomon Islands UN ambassador Collin Beck, who introduced the resolution with Nauru, Tuvalu, Samoa, Vanuatu and East Timor, told the General Assembly there was “wide international support” for putting Polynesia back on the list.

“The map of decolonizing remains an unfinished business of the United Nations,” Beck said.

The result of elections in French Polynesia “must never be equated with a referendum” on self-determination, he added.

Britain refused the consensus. A British diplomat told the General Assembly that the UN decolonization committee has an “outdated approach.”

The Netherlands, United States and Germany said that the General Assembly should have taken account of the election in French Polynesia which kicked the independence party out of power.

“We are surprised” that the vote went ahead, said deputy US ambassador Jeffrey DeLaurentis.

France also has the Pacific territory of New Caledonia on the UN decolonization list.

Britain has the Falklands/Malvinas along with Gibraltar, Anguilla, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Montserrat, St Helena, Turks and Caicos islands and Pitcairn on the UN list.

Britain boycotts committee hearings on the Falklands, which Argentina uses to assert its sovereignty claim. American Samoa, Guam and the US Virgin Islands come under US jurisdiction. New Zealand has Tokelau on the list while Western Sahara is disputed between Morocco and the Polisario Front.
 

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  • Monty69

    The wording of this resolution is a complete nonsense, equating self determination with only one option; independence. What if the population decided to stay as they are? Would that not still be self- determination?

    I'm not sure what this has to do with us. We have said quite clearly that we don't think we're ready for independence yet. And so we don't need to be de-colonised, thanks.

    May 20th, 2013 - 03:50 am 0
  • Anglotino

    So nothing has really changed for French Polynesia.

    May 20th, 2013 - 04:19 am 0
  • Think

    To make a long story short......:
    The English government ”disassociates itself ” at the UN from the “Inalienable Rights of the Native Peoples of French Polynesia,... Palestine… and Diego Garcia to self-determination and independence”.

    At the same time....:
    The English government associate itself to the ”Imaginary Rights of the Implanted Colonial Individuals on the Malvinas Isles to self-determine their dependence to England.

    Hypocrisy anyone?

    PS:
    (1) Monty96
    You are not sure what this has to do with you?
    Really???
    Chuckle chuckle©

    May 20th, 2013 - 06:13 am 0
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