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New Caledonia · 2026-06-06

Paris judges dismiss case against Kanak leader Tein over 2024 riots; prosecutor appeals

Parisian investigating judges ordered a general dismissal (non-lieu) for FLNKS president Christian Tein and 13 other Kanak CCAT activists accused of orchestrating the deadly May 2024 riots, finding insufficient evidence and explicitly rejecting the 'insurrection' charge. The judges held that the independence movement's aims did not seek to imperil Republican institutions or seize the territory by armed attack on the French state. The Paris prosecutor's office immediately appealed, citing a need for further investigation of the roughly 11,500-page case file. The decision drew sharply divided reactions, with defense lawyers hailing it as proof of the rule of law while loyalist figures like Sonia Backes and Nicolas Metzdorf criticized it. The news lands three weeks before the pivotal provincial elections scheduled for 28 June 2026.

Why it matters

The 2024 unrest, sparked by a contested constitutional move to thaw the electoral roll, left 14 dead and over €2 billion in damage, the worst violence in New Caledonia since the 1980s. Tein's transfer 17,000 km to mainland detention had become a rallying symbol for the independence cause and a flashpoint in Paris-Nouméa relations, so a dismissal validating the movement's political legitimacy carries major weight ahead of provincial elections that will shape the territory's institutional future.

🔎 Ground signal

Locals are intensely focused on the 28 June provincial vote, which simultaneously determines the provinces, the Congress and the future government, with built-in over-representation of the pro-independence Nord and Îles provinces—context that makes the Tein ruling politically charged on both sides.