Published: 7:42PM Thursday August 06, 2009
Source: Reuters
New Caledonian union protesters and authorities have signed an
accord ending a week of violent clashes sparked by an airline
labour dispute in the South Pacific archipelago, a French
government official said.
The dispute at Aircal, owned by the government, had escalated over
the past week with unionists calling for a general strike and with
clashes between police and protesters.
The clashes, which began over the sacking of a flight attendant,
left 28 gendarmes injured. Police arrested 13 protesters.
Television images over the past week showed burning barricades
along a main road into the capital, Noumea.
"The situation is completely back to normal. A protocol has been
signed during the night," said Michele Lajus, spokeswoman at the
Haut Commissariat in Noumea.
"There are no more roadblocks or barricades," the French government
official said.
Police reinforcements have been sent from Paris, but police in
Noumea said they were no longer needed.
New Caledonia, a major nickel exporter, is one of several overseas
French territories that have experienced unrest this year.
Guadelupe, in the Caribbean, and the Reunion in the Indian Ocean have also been hit by strikes and clashes.
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