Sonia Backès

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Sonia Backès
President of the Assembly of South Province
Assumed office
May 17, 2019
Preceded byPhilippe Michel
Personal details
Born
Sonia Dos Santos

(1976-05-21) 21 May 1976 (age 45)
Nouméa, New Caledonia
NationalityFrench
Political partyCaledonian Republicans (since 2017)
Other political
affiliations
Popular Caledonian Movement (2013-2015)
The Rally–UMP (2004-2013)
Rally for Caledonia in the Republic (1994–2004)

Sonia Backès (born 21 May 1976) is a French politician in New Caledonia. She is the current leader of the Caledonian Republicans party and the President of the Provincial Assembly of South Province since May 17, 2019.[1]

Background[]

Born Sonia Dos Santos, she is the daughter of language teachers. Her grandparents on her father's side were Protestant émigrés from Portugal, fleeing Catholicism and the authoritairian Estado Novo regime of António de Oliveira Salazar, arriving in Nouméa in 1952. She attended the lycée Lapérouse de Nouméa, graduating in 1992. She joined the right-wing RPCR party (Rassemblement pour la Calédonie dans la République) in 1994 at the age of 18. She studied at the precursor of the University of New Caledonia (UNC), the Université française du Pacifique à Nouméa, also gaining a Masters in Mathematics from the University of Pau in France in 1997, and becoming a qualified computer engineer in 2001 after study at the Université Joseph-Fourier and the Institut polytechnique in Grenoble.[2][circular reference]

Her first job in Nouméa was at the government DTSI (direction des Technologies et Services de l'Information), while also teaching part time at the UNC. In the mid 2000s she worked in trades unions, notably for the CFE-CGC[3][circular reference] before quitting in 2008 to enter politics.

She is married to Éric Backès, and has two children.

Political career[]

She has been associated with several political parties at territorial and provincial levels, holding portfolios ranging from education and schooling to energy, finance, taxation, the digital economy, and higher education.[4][circular reference] She was with the RPCR Rally for Caledonia in the Republic until 2004, then the Rassemblement-UMP (The Rally–UMP) (2004-2013). By 2012 she was part of a right faction within the UMP calling for a stronger commitment to anti-independence, or 'loyalist' values. She was suspended by Pierre Frogier in 2013, who said "your political line embodies all the conservatisms and all the archaisms by taking us back 25 years, far from the daring and innovative project that the Rassemblement carries today”.[5][circular reference] Gaël Yanno and his supporters, including Sonia Backès, created the Caledonian Popular Movement (MPC, Mouvement populaire calédonien) which then won the elections, placing her in a strong position. She moved into the Républicains de Nouvelle-Calédonie (LR-NC) from 2015-2017 and the Républicains calédoniens (RC) from 2017. She became President of the Provincial Assembly of South Province in 2019.

2021 controversy[]

Backès remains strongly opposed to an independent New Caledonia, and this is also the position of her political party. In the runup to a third referendum on independence from France (held in late 2021), she was able to travel to New York to address the United Nations on 17 June 2021, telling the UN Special Committee on Decolonisation that “in New Caledonia, there is no longer an administering power and a colonised people.”[6][7] This is at odds with the 1998 Nouméa Accord signed by the French state among others, which recognised the Kanak as a “people”, not simply an ethnic minority: saying “Colonisation attacked the dignity of the Kanak people by depriving them of their identity.”

References[]

  1. ^ "New Caledonia's Backes aims for southern province presidency". RNZ. May 14, 2019.
  2. ^ fr:Sonia Backès
  3. ^ fr:Confédération française de l'encadrement - Confédération générale des cadres
  4. ^ fr:Sonia Backès
  5. ^ fr:Sonia Backès
  6. ^ "Référendum 2021 : Si le non l'emporte, Sonia Backès souhaite retirer la Nouvelle-Calédonie de la liste des pays à décoloniser".
  7. ^ "Sonia Backès (Délégation loyaliste): "Nous voulons sortir de l'incertitude"".
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