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1976 Mahoran Comoros referendum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A referendum on remaining in the Comoros was held in Mayotte on 8 February 1976.[1] The proposal was rejected by 99.42% of voters.[1]

Background

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The French National Assembly passed a law on 31 December 1975 allowing for the independence of the Comoros without Mayotte. A referendum was subsequently organised in Mayotte for February 1976 to determine whether residents of the territory wished to remain part of the Comoros or stay under French control.[1]

France vetoed a United Nations Security Council proposal to call off the referendum;[2] this marked the first and so far the only time France has vetoed a United Nations Security Council Resolution on its own. Five nonaligned states had proposed that the Security Council call for the cancellation of the referendum.[2]

Results

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ChoiceVotes%
For1040.58
Against17,84599.42
Total17,949100.00
Valid votes17,94999.38
Invalid/blank votes1120.62
Total votes18,061100.00
Registered voters/turnout21,67183.34
Source: Direct Democracy

References

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  1. ^ a b c Mayotte, 8. Februar 1976 : Verbleib bei den Komoren Direct Democracy (in German)
  2. ^ a b "French Veto Move In U.N. Opposing Vote in Comoro Isle". The New York Times. 7 February 1976. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 4 December 2022.