OPINION: NOUMEA (Pacific Scoop / Radio Djiido / Pacific Media Watch): Does a recent controversy about use of the word “Kanaky” by French Overseas Minister Victorin Lurel make us laugh or cry?
At his meeting with the President of the Northern Province of
Kanaky/New Caledonia, Paul Néaoutyine, Lurel “dared” to say Kanaky
referring to the indigenous name for New Caledonia.
Local news media reports had the pro-France political parties panicking and press releases were going out in droves.
Caledonie Ensemble (New Caledonia Together) said the minister had
trampled on the territory’s “sovereignty” that the people of New
Caledonia would decide on according to the Noumea Accord.
Will it be Kanaky ? Kanaky/New Caledonia? That’s the question?
Sometime between 2014 and 2018, selected voters will have to express
themselves on a referendum on independence for the French-ruled Pacific
territory.
Meanwhile, many sovereign identity issues have been voted on in the
Congress of New Caledonia, such as the currency design, the anthem, and
recently the flag that the Prime Minister of France, François Fillon,
himself raised on July 17, 2010.
Collective amnesia
However, it looks like there is a collective amnesia
in the country. Few opponents can just stand there and watch an
indigenous people lifting the flag with the colours of the
pro-independence FLNKS.
As a response to these views and hysterical reactions from the
pro-France political parties, minister Lurel asked: “Yes, I said Kanaky,
but is it a swear word?”
Unfortunately it looks like the answer is yes for some people. Kanaky
is still split between these two political accords, Matignon 1988 and
Noumea 1998 – particularly when an election is coming up.
Now there is a a part of New Caledonia where the people don’t even realise that there are indigenous “Kanak people” there.
But, the FLNKS, as the political representative of the Kanak people, should be more united to make a sense of the reality.
How can we explain that after 25 years of struggle and two accords with
France, Kanak people are still in a minority and treated like this in
their own land?
http://www.pmc.aut.ac.nz/pacific-media-watch/new-caledonia-uproar-over-use-kanaky-name-lingers-8055
http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/international/radio/program/pacific-beat/kanaky-a-new-swear-word-in-new-caledonia/1000244
Magalie TINGAL,
August, 2012,
Suva - Fiji Islands
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