France

Why veteran Polynesian independence leader is to run for French presidency

Oscar Temaru, the veteran leader of the pro-independence movement in French Polynesia, is hoping to run in this spring’s French presidential elections. He is currently in mainland France to lobby elected representatives, from Members of Parliament to village mayors, for the mandatory 500 signatures of support for his candidature which are required to enter the race. Temaru openly declares he does not want to become president, but instead he hopes to win the vote of a majority of Polynesians in order to declare the archipelago’s independence. Is his campaign a political stunt or a significant challenge to French rule? Julien Sartre reports.    

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Oscar Temaru, the 72-year-old leader of French Polynesia’s pro-independence movement, arrived in France this month to further his campaign to run in this spring’s presidential elections.

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