FLNC-Canal Historique
| FLNC-Canal Historique | |
|---|---|
| FLNC-Canale Storicu | |
Flag of Corsica with an FLNC wordmark at the bottom, used often during FLNC-CS press conferences | |
| Leaders | Charles Pieri, François Santoni |
| Dates of operation | 25 November 1990 - 23 December 1999 |
| Split from | National Liberation Front of Corsica (1976-1999) |
| Merged into | FLNC-Union of Combattants |
| Country | Corsica (France) |
| Motives | Corsican nationalism |
| Active regions | Attacks across Corsica and in mainland France, Italy |
| Allies |
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| Opponents | |
| Battles and wars | Corsican conflict |
The FLNC-Canal Historique (Corsican: Canale Storicu; abbreviated FLNC-CS) was an armed paramilitary and guerrilla organization created in 1990 from a split within the command structure of the original FLNC. The organization was created to be a radically militant force, rejecting the idea of ceasefire with the French government. During Corsica's “Lead Years”, a violent period of intense guerrilla warfare in the 1990s, the FLNC-CS was the most violent and active organization, engaging in intense conflict with both the French government and armed forces, but also with other nationalist organizations, engaging in a war with Alain Orsoni’s FLNC-Canal Habituel (Canale Abituale, FLNC-CA). In 1999, The FLNC-CS became one of the founding members of the FLNC-Union of Combattants, a guerrilla organization which remains active today following the end of a nine-year long ceasefire.
The FLNC-CS formed after a 2-year long dissident campaign within the FLNC, during with brigade leaders and individual divisions of the FLNC began to separate due to their views of the 1988 ceasefire as “illegitimate”. On 25 November 1990, the town of Borgo was invaded, and in the same day during the occupation the dissident militants declared the creation of the “Historic Channel” (Corsican: Canale Storicu; French: Canal Historique) of the FLNC. One month earlier, the “Habituel Channel” (FLNC-Canale Abituale, FLNC-CA) was formed out of the dissolution of the brigade council and Orsoni’s seizure of power. These two groups would be engaged in a drawn out civil war until the dissolution of the FLNC-CA in 1997. In 1996, the FLNC-CS would begin to lose footing to Fronte Ribellu, a group that split from the FLNC-CS, and the FLNC-5 May (FLNC-5 Maghju, FLNC-5M), a split of the FLNC-CA dedicated to remaining militant against the FLNC-CS in the face of a “inevitable” FLNC-CA disarming campaign. In 1999, the FLNC-CS southern division leader François Santoni split from the organization to form Armata Corsa, a hyper-militant organization that carried out a large number of assassinations and organized attacks on the FLNC-CS and other guerrillas as well as French authorities. On 23 December 1999, the FLNC-CS, Fronte Ribellu, the FLNC-5M, and a small organization called Clandestinu formed the FLNC-Union of Combattants to better organize against both Armata Corsa and the French.