A piece of
Britain lies between Madagascar, Sri Lanka and Indonesia. To date the Chagos
Islands are still under British control and their inhabitants live in exile.
But the UK has missed a deadline to return them.
The anger
in his voice is clearly audible. There is a lack of goodwill on the side of the
British government, Olivier Bancoult says. The fight over the Chagos
archipelago has been dragging on for too long. "We are continuing to put
pressure [on the British government]," Bancoult told DW. As a young boy,
Bancoult was one of the Chagos residents who were forced to resettle. Today he lives
in Mauritius and as a lawyer has been fighting for the people of Chagos and
their descendants to return to the islands. On Friday, November 22, the United Nations deadline for the return of the islands to its people. Bancoult is
amongst the organizers of a demonstration outside the British High Commission
in Mauritius.
Mauritius,
which had once been part of the same colonial territory as the Chagos islands,
gained its independence in 1968. Between 1968 and 1973, up to 2,000 residents
of the Chagos archipelago were forced to move to Mauritius, the Seychelles and
UK in order to establish a military base on the main island, Diego Garcia. In
the meantime, the UK has leased it to the US until 2036. Chagos served as a
military base for both the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
Geostrategic importance
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The largest
island, Diego Garcis, serves as a US military base
|
Geostrategic importance
"We
were poor people who are living in peace and harmony until they made the
decision to giv one of the largest islands to America to make a military base.
Since that time our nightmare started. Many of us were forcibly removed from
our native land to live in Mauritius and the Seychelles," Bancoult told DW.
In February the International Court of Justice in The Hague, ruled that the
archipelago is legally a part of Mauritius. The court said that Britain had
illegally separated the islands from Mauritius and should give them back.
The British
government rejected the ruling. "The UK has no doubt as to our sovereignty
over the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT), which has been under continuous
British sovereignty since 1814," read a statement by the British Foreign
and Commonwealth Office. The statement, however, alleged that Britain had
pledged to hand over the islands to
Mauritius when they are no longer needed for defense purposes.
In May, the
UN General Assembly also called on the UK to handover the islands. The deadline
for the handover expired on November 22, but the resolution is not binding and
the UK seems to have no intention to make such a move in the near future.
The strategic
location and the military role of the island, make the very calls for its
independence very difficult. Philippe
Sands, a British lawyer who advises the Mauritian government on the Chagos
matter, believes that talks between the UK, the US and Mauritius will continue
to take place. "Mauritius has indicated that the military base could even
remain on the island," Sands told DW.
Read more:
The Commonwealth: Still relevant for Africa today?
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| The archipelago belings to the same island group as Mauritius which gained independence from Britain in 1968 |
Clinging
onto the last African colony
Sands
believes that Britain's reluctance to bow to international pressure lies in the
fact that it is still coming to terms with its new place in world politics.
"[The UK] is a diminished power. It has lost its judge at the
International Court of Justice, it has lost a series of resolutions at the UN
General Assembly. I think its just taking time to come to the realization, that
ist legal situation and is very different, but ultimately I think the UK will
comply with the court," Sands said.
The UK,
Sands explained, is paying a high price for its political losses. "They're
in the process of leaving the European Union, and they have to negotiate new trade
agreements and political agreements with several countries. The government is
in real trouble and I think that is why it is clinging on to its last colony in
Africa," Sands said. For him,
keeping the islands under British control amounts to a crime against the people
of Chagos.
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| Chagossians celebrate the news of the UN resolution calling on the UK give up control of the islands (February 2019) |
Hopes set
on upcoming UK elections
According
to Sands, the UN is already preparing new maps which show the Chagos islands as
part of Mauritius. Additionally Mauritius is the only country that can have
legal rights to fishing and overflying rights of the area.
Sands and
Bancoult have the hope that the upcoming UK elections set for December 12 could
make a difference. "The Labour party has promised to respect the ruling of
the International Court of Justice," Sands said. "If the next
government is under the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn that would be very good,”
Bancoult said. "He already supports us."
According
to Bancoult, 596 Chagossians who were forced to leave the islands are still
alive today. All in all, he said, they have 9.800 descendants who identify as
Chagossians. Bancoult himself finds the thought of growing old away from his
homeland difficult. "Most old people want to die where they were
born," he said.




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