Anne Boquet

Anne Boquet
Prefect of Côte-d'Or
In office
25 November 2010  16 November 2011
Preceded byChristian Galliard de Lavernée
Succeeded byPascal Mailhos
Prefect of Yvelines
In office
13 June 2008  25 November 2010
Preceded byChristian Galliard de Lavernée
Succeeded byMichel Jau
High Commissioner of the Republic in French Polynesia
In office
18 July 2005  13 June 2008
Preceded byMichel Mathieu
Succeeded byAdolphe Colrat
Prefect of Yvelines
In office
21 June 2000  10 October 2002
Preceded byJean-Claude Vacher
Succeeded byJean-François Tallec
Personal details
Born (1952-03-19) March 19, 1952
Bellac, Haute-Vienne, France
Nationality French
Alma mater

Anne Boquet (born 19 March 1952 in Bellac, France) is a retired French senior civil servant. She is the first and only woman to have been High Commissioner in French Polynesia to date.

Boquet had previously served as Secretary-General in the French High commission in Pape'ete from 1993 to 1996 and as Prefect in several French departments. Her administration as High Commissioner saw unprecedented political instability with the turnover of five successive governments and three separate presidents come and go due to votes of no confidence and party switching by top politicians in French Polynesia.

Boquet's term as High Commissioner in French Polynesia ended with her appointment as Prefect for the metropolitan department of the Yvelines in the Paris region on 28 June 2008.

She was awarded the rank of Commandeur of the Order of Tahiti Nui, which is French Polynesia's highest honor, in June 2008 for her service to the collectivity. French Polynesian President Gaston Tong Sang hailed Boquet's term and her action in "restoring dialogue" between French Polynesia and metropolitan France in a speech at the award ceremony.

Boquet stressed the importance of political stability as a precondition for future economic development in her final message before her departure from French Polynesia. "It must absolutely create a more positive climate of confidence for things to move ahead," she stated, "But I'm confident, (French Polynesians) are a strong people, even though the climate is not always easy...I'm confident and I call on (French Polynesians) to have faith in themselves too." She also noted that the future of French Polynesia lies with its young people.