New Caledonia held its second independence referendum on 4 October 2020. 53. 26 percent of voters rejected independence, a slight drop from the 2018 result. The territory was formally annexed by France in 1853, and Europeans and Polynesians, as well as other settlers, have since made the indigenous Kanaks a minority.
About 2020 New Caledonian independence referendum in brief

The first referendum on independence was held the following year on 13 September 1987, but independence was rejected by a large majority, with 842 people voting for independence and 48,611 people voting to remain a part of France. The Matignon Agreements, signed on 26 June 1988 by Jean-Marie Tjibaou and Jacques Lafleur, set up a ten-year period of stability.
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