NEWCASTLE, Australia (AP) — Australia and New Zealand sent airplanes to New Caledonia on Tuesday to begin bringing home stranded citizens from the violence-wracked French South Pacific territory. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia had received clearance from French authorities for two flights to evacuate citizens from the archipelago, where indigenous people have long sought independence from France. Hours later, a Royal Australian Air Force C-130 Hercules touched down in Noumea, the capital. The plane can carry 124 passengers, according to the Defense Department. “We continue to work on further flights,” Wong wrote on the social media platform X on Tuesday. The Department of Foreign Affairs said 300 Australians were in New Caledonia. It did not immediately confirm whether the Australian-organized flights would also evacuate other stranded foreign nationals, believed to number in the thousands. |
(BRF2023) Xi to Address Opening Ceremony of 3rd Belt and Road Forum for Int'l CooperationXi Focus: Xi Calls on Jiangxi to Write Its Chapter in Chinese ModernizationU.S. ports remain confident in ChinaXi Story: Small Projects for Greater ProsperityEconomy on stable footing, experts sayXi Focus: Xi Calls on Jiangxi to Write Its Chapter in Chinese ModernizationChinese telecom firms urge more cooperationTechnology adoption a key driver of greater global food productionReady to be world's largest spender on R&D3D printing expo displays high