News in Brief

More flights on the way to evacuate stranded Australians from New Caledonia

Australians stranded in New Caledonia following deadly riots will have another chance to leave after the Albanese government announced additional repatriation flights.

Officers assist elderly tourists.

Royal Australian Air Force Flight Sergeant John Marshall (second left) assists Australians and other tourists to a waiting plane for departure from Noumea, New Caledonia. Source: AAP / LAC Adam Abela

The federal government is organising more flights to evacuate Australians stranded in New Caledonia following deadly riots, Foreign Minister Penny Wong has said.

Background: New Caledonia has been in the grips of deadly riots for more than a week, resulting in at least seven deaths.

The riots were sparked by France's decision to allow French citizens who have lived in New Caledonia for more than 10 years to be eligible to vote in local elections.

The key quote: "We continue to help Australians outside of Noumea to travel to the capital, and we are making plans for additional flights onwards to Australia for tomorrow (Sunday)." — Foreign Minister Penny Wong posted on social media.
What else to know: Two Australian repatriation flights and a French-organised flight brought home 187 Australians and citizens of other nations on Friday.

Some 300 Australians registered their interest to leave with the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFAT). Wong said the DFAT is in touch with them.
What happens next: French President Emmanuel Macron delayed the controversial voting reforms that sparked the unrest in a bid to calm tensions. He said he still planned to enact the law but only when peace had returned to New Caledonia.


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2 min read
Published 25 May 2024 2:50pm
Source: SBS News


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