A/HRC/18/35/Add.6
300,000 hectares of land on Grand Terre is now customary land, equivalent to the amount
of privately owned land on this island, the largest of the islands that form New Caledonia. 13
31.
Nevertheless, while the land redistribution process has resulted in the transfer of
significant tracts of land to the Kanak people, Kanak representatives have expressed
frustration that their land claims had been stalled after submission to ADRAF, and that
numerous land claims remain outstanding. Furthermore, the Nouméa Accord (art. 1.4)
provides for the creation of a customary land survey and registry to assist with resolving
land disputes, but to date this provision has not been implemented. The Customary Senate,
which has a seat on the Board of ADRAF, has expressed an interest in taking a leadership
role in the Agency in order to establish the customary land registry and a trust fund for the
development of customary land, as well as to create a new mechanism for the resolution of
land disputes arising between indigenous individuals or clans.14
Access to the sea
32.
Sea access is important to the Kanak people for subsistence fishing and shellfish
harvesting, and for ceremonies Also, for some clans, the sea is an integral part of clan
identity. However, the Special Rapporteur heard from several Kanak sources that their
access to fishing areas in some places is blocked by owners of private property adjacent to
coastal areas.
33.
The Special Rapporteur notes a potential incompatibility between the State legal
system, under which maritime and coastal areas are public domain, and traditional Kanak
resource and land use in these areas. The Special Rapporteur heard complaints from Kanak
chiefs of their inability to exclude others from coastal areas during ceremonies, which
impinges on their ability to practice their religious customs and ceremonies. This can lead
to conflict, as in one example in Loyalty Islands, when a Kanak mayor attempted to prevent
tourists from accessing the beach during a yam ceremony and was taken to court.
34.
The Special Rapporteur notes that although the Kanak are subject to the same
fishing permit requirements as all New Caledonian citizens, the provinces may give
exemptions to Kanak people for ceremonial purposes, particularly for capturing tortoises
and dugongs, or for fishing in bio-reserves.15
Extractive industries and environmental protection
35.
Nickel extraction has taken place in New Caledonia since the mineral was first
discovered there in the 1860s. Typically, nickel mining has been carried out on lands
considered to be public lands, but to which the Kanak people continue to have cultural ties.
Mining activities in proximity to Kanak communities have invariably affected the natural
environment on which Kanak people depend. In the past, many small miners operated
open-pit mines throughout the central massif with minimal regulation, which led to
considerable water and soil pollution and degradation. The eventual establishment of large-
13
14
15
See ADRAF, Cartographie des Terres Coutumières, available at
http://www.adraf.nc/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=58&Itemid=78.
Customary Senate, Report of the Customary Senate of New Caledonia on the Current Situation of the
Kanak People of Kanaky-New Caledonia (8 Feburary 2011).
Fishing in New Caledonia is regulated by the provinces; provincial fishing regulations, including
exemptions available to Kanak for ceremonial purposes by the President of the relevant Provincial
Assembly, are contained in the Memento sur la reglementation des pêches maritimes (June 2004) of
the Service de la Marine Marchande et des Pêches Maritimes, available at
https://www.spc.int/coastfish/Countries/NCaledonia/Nouvelle-Caledonie-regs.pdf.
11