PARIS — Violence raged across New Caledonia for the third consecutive day Thursday, hours after France imposed a state of emergency in the French Pacific territory, boosting security forces' powers to quell unrest in the archipelago that has long sought independence.
French authorities in New Caledonia and the interior ministry in Paris said five people, including two police officers, were killed after protests earlier this week over voting reforms pushed by President Emmanuel Macron's government turned deadly.
At least 60 members of the security forces were injured and 214 people were arrested over clashes with police, arson and looting Thursday, the territory's top French official, High Commissioner Louis Le Franc, said.
''Everything is being done to restore order and calm that Caledonians deserve,'' French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said after a meeting at the Elysee presidential palace in Paris.
He said that in addition to 1,700 security forces troops that have already been deployed to help police, 1,000 more are on the way but the situation ''remains very tense, with looting, riots, arson and attacks, which are unbearable and unspeakable.''
Two members of the island's Indigenous Kanak community were among the five dead, French Interior and Overseas Territories Minister Gerald Darmanin said Thursday as he vowed that France "will regain total control.''
He said 10 people, all allegedly from the pro-independence movement known as The Field Acton Coordination Unit, were under house arrest. In April, the group had backed several protests against French authorities on the island.
Still, Darmanin claimed the movement is a ''small group which calls itself pro-independence, but instead commits looting, murder and violence.''