Voters in New Caledonia have overwhelmingly rejected independence from France in a referendum boycotted by the pro-independence camp.
Unofficial results show more than 96 percent voted against independence in the third and last such plebiscite under the 1998 Noumea Accord.
Turnout was just under 44 percent, down from more than 85 percent last year.
Pro-independence parties had called on their supporters not to vote after France refused to postpone the referendum because of the impact of the pandemic on the indigenous Kanak population.
The customary Kanak Senate had declared Sunday to be a day of mourning for the 280 people who died in the pandemic.
The French High Commission said voting was peaceful and there were no incidents.
All communes voted against independence, including those where last year more than 90 percent voted for independence.
On Belep turnout was 0.6 percent, while on Lifou, which is also a mainly Kanak island, some voting stations had not a single voter.
Anti-independence leaders welcomed the result.
Philippe Michel, a Congress member since 1999, said the voters' verdict is indisputable.
Gil Brial, who heads MPC, said the victory is not only a legal one but also a political one because it was the pro-independence parties which demanded the third referendum.
Nina Julie of Generations NC said this victory means that New Caledonians keep their French passports.
Before the vote, the pro-independence parties said they would not recognise the result, and ruled out any negotiations on any future status before next April's French presidential election.
They also ruled out meeting the French overseas minister Sebastien Lecornu who arrived in Noumea at the weekend for post-referendum negotiations.
The decolonisation mechanism, at play with two main accords since 1988, has now reached its formal end without the full participation of the colonised people at the centre of the process.
The long road to third referendum
New Caledonia has been on the UN decolonisation list since 1986.
Pro-independence parties said before the plebiscite that in case of a third no vote they would seek direct bilateral talks with Paris on the territory's decolonisation.
The December date for the referendum was chosen by Lecornu in June after he dismissed calls by the pro-independence parties to hold it in late 2022.
His position echoed the consensus that the referendum date should in no way overlap with the campaign period for the French presidential and legislative elections due next year.
In the two preceding referendums under the Noumea Accord, the percentage of people voting no fell from 56.7 percent in 2018 to 53.3 percent in 2020.
After the 2018 referendum, the then French prime minister Edouard Philippe expressed satisfaction that all agreed on the indisputable nature of the result of this referendum.
With the overwhelming no vote, today's referendum decision puts the onus back on France to find a new way to accommodate the Kanaks' right to self-determination.
President Emmanuel Macron has welcomed the result, saying France is more beautiful because New Caledonia decided to remain part of it.
He said with the end of the Noumea Accord, the territory is free of the binary choice between yes and no.
Mr Macron said now a new common project must be built while recognising and respecting the dignity of everyone.