Oman Daily Observer

World Court to rule in Chagos islands row

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THE HAGUE: The UN’ top court will hand down its view on Monday in a bitter dispute between Britain and Mauritius over the fate of the Chagos islands, home to key UK and US military base.

Judges at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice will give their opinion on the future status of the remote Indian Ocean archipelag­o housing the US base of Diego Garcia, leased from Britain on territory claimed by Mauritius.

Colonial power Britain between in the late 1960s and early 1970s evicted around 2,000 Chagos islanders to Mauritius and the Seychelles to make way for the base, in a lease which expires in 2036.

Chagos islanders — who have been banned from visiting the islands without special authorisat­ion — have been fighting for their return since first launching legal action in 1975, with some receiving compensati­on from London in 1982.

In a new diplomatic blow to Britain, the UN General Assembly in 2017 adopted a resolution presented by Mauritius and backed by African countries asking the ICJ to offer legal advice on the island chain’s fate.

The ICJ’S 15-judge bench will now hand down a non-binding “advisory opinion” at its headquarte­rs at the Peace Palace in The Hague.

London split off the remote islands from Mauritius three years before Port Louis gained independen­ce in 1968. Their status has since been at the centre of a bitter dispute spanning five decades.

During the Cold War, London establishe­d a combined military base with the US on Diego Garcia, the largest of the islands, which was a key staging ground for bombing campaigns in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Judges heard the case in September, with Mauritius arguing that it was illegal for London to break up its territory while still under colonial rule. Its case was backed by India.

Chagos, said Port Louis’ lawyers, was “integral to Mauritius” and that the decolonisa­tion process of the island group “remains incomplete.”

Britain in turn apologised for the “shameful” way it evicted thousands of islanders but insisted Mauritius was wrong to bring the case to the ICJ.

The US meanwhile said the court had a “duty” not to take a position on the row.

Experts said that should the ICJ’S judges give an opinion, it is most likely to revolve around the legality of Britain’s move to split Chagos from Mauritius — which lies some 2,100 kilometres to the southwest.

“The main question will be whether separating the two was — at the time — a breach of internatio­nal law in the sense that it did not respect the right of self-determinat­ion of the Chagossian­s,” said Eric De Brabandere, a professor of internatio­nal law at the University of Leiden.

“Then the question is whether the continued administra­tion by Britain has any consequenc­es,” he said.

“I think that the court will say something about the right to selfdeterm­ination of the Chagossian­s now, and the need to complete the decolonisa­tion process,” he said.

While the ICJ’S “advisory opinion” is not binding, it still carries weight and a finding in favour of Mauritius may strengthen its hand in future negotiatio­ns over the Chagos islands.

London split off the remote islands from Mauritius before Port Louis gained independen­ce. Their status has since been at the centre of a bitter dispute spanning five decades

 ?? — Reuters file photo ?? A demonstrat­or demanding her return to the Chagos Islands in the Diego Garcia archipelag­o shouts during a protest outside the Houses of Parliament in London.
— Reuters file photo A demonstrat­or demanding her return to the Chagos Islands in the Diego Garcia archipelag­o shouts during a protest outside the Houses of Parliament in London.

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