French court orders release of New Caledonia pro-independence leader
13/6/2025 6:33
A French appeals court
ordered New Caledonia pro-independence leader Christian Tein
freed from prison on Thursday, affirming a lower court ruling
after deadly riots in the French Pacific territory last year.
"The Paris Court of Appeals confirmed the order for
Christian Tein's release and his placement under judicial
supervision," a judicial source said, without providing more
details.
In spring 2024, violent protests swept New Caledonia after
French lawmakers approved a plan to grant voting rights in the
territory to thousands more French citizen residents. President
Emmanuel Macron declared a state of emergency.
Indigenous Kanaks feared the change would dilute their votes
and make it harder for an independence referendum to pass.
In June 2024, police arrested Tein, who led an offshoot of
Caledonian Union called the Field Action Coordination Cell
(CCAT), which organised protest barricades across the capital
Noumea. He was extradited to France that same month.
France scrapped the voting overhaul in October 2024.
|
|