A tiny island in the corner of a distant ocean will vote next Sunday to become a French departement or county - defying a separatist trend in other fragments of France scattered around the globe.
Mayotte in the Indian Ocean, population 180,000 and roughly the size of the Isle of Wight, is confidently expected to vote to become the 101st departement of France in a long-awaited referendum. Despite the angry opposition of the African Union and the nearby Comoros, the islanders have long insisted that they want to retain, and even solidify, their Frenchness.
They are expected to vote overwhelmingly to end their present vague status as a French "overseas collectivity" and agree to become a fully fledged overseas departement - legally as much a part of France as Paris or the Pas de Calais.
When the new status takes effect in 2011, the overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim people of the one large and one small island in Mayotte will have to come in line with the French legal code. Among other things, they will have to give up Islamic courts, polygamy and child marriages. They will qualify gradually for French social benefits over 25 years.
The vote in Mayotte may appear to be a historical anachronism. The African Union has long supported the sovereignty claim of the nearby island nation of Comoros, which was once part of a single French colony with Mayotte.