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New Caledonia Marks Years of French Rule With Parade

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From Associated Press

Native Kanak and descendants of French and other settlers paraded a giant wooden statue Saturday through the streets of Noumea on the South Pacific island of New Caledonia, turning the 152nd anniversary of its annexation by France into a celebration of ethnic diversity.

Festivities began with a procession through Noumea, in which representatives of each of New Caledonia’s ethnic groups took turns carrying the massive statue, which symbolized the island’s first man.

“This is a day to celebrate our national identity,” said 44-year-old Tony Solomon, who is of mixed French, Indonesian and Kanak heritage.

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Kanak tribesmen danced alongside the descendants of New Caledonia’s French settlers and members of the island’s Vietnamese, Korean, Arab, Chinese, Javanese, Polynesian and Melanesian communities.

New Caledonia, a country of 220,000 about 745 miles east of Australia, has been ruled by France since 1853.

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