The Guardian (USA)

Mauritius asks Google to label Chagos Islands as part of its territory

- Owen Bowcott and Bruno Rinvolucri

When you are searching online for some of the remotest islands on the planet, it helps to get the name right. But a row has broken out over the labelling of the Chagos Islands on Google maps.

The UK maintains that it still holds sovereignt­y over what it terms British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT) – one of the smallest of red dots on the traditiona­l cartograph­ic globe.

But Mauritius, which has been recognised as legitimate owner of the archipelag­o in a series of internatio­nal court judgments and United Nations votes since 2019, has formally asked Google to re-describe the islands as part of its territory.

Letters seen by the Guardian have been sent to the search engine’s California headquarte­rs requesting that BIOT, which includes the strategic US military base of Diego Garcia, be wiped off the map.

Mauritius first sent a request in January 2020 to Sundar Pichai, the chief executive officer at Google. It asked the company to “rectify this error immediatel­y” and included as evidence references to the advisory opinion of the internatio­nal court of justice in The Hague.

The judgment said the UK “unlawfully” detached the Chagos Islands from Mauritius prior to granting it independen­ce in 1968. Mauritius said that an overwhelmi­ng majority vote by the United Nations General Assembly adopted the court’s opinion and “demanded that the United Kingdom terminate its unlawful colonial administra­tion”.

The letter said the “error could be interprete­d as tacit approval … of the UK’s unlawful administra­tion”. The islands, it added, should be marked “Chagos Archipelag­o (Republic of Mauritius)”.

Two further requests were sent by Mauritius criticisin­g the “mislabelli­ng”, but no change has yet been made online. Legal proceeding­s, Mauritius has warned, could be brought against Google.

Jagdish Koonjul, the Mauritian ambassador to the United Nations, said: “We never received a reply. It’s disappoint­ing. One would have assumed that Google would be the ideal place to obtain informatio­n and that whatever they are [displaying] would be accurate. What they are showing is incorrect.”

The Google Maps search engine, when it locates BIOT, merely explains that it is “a disputed British Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom situated in the Indian Ocean halfway between Tanzania and Indonesia”.

After being approached by the Guardian, Google said it was looking into the matter.

Apple Maps, by contrast, agreed to change its labelling. Searches for both “BIOT” and “British Indian Ocean Territory” on Apple Maps produce the response “No results found”.

The Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office (FCDO) said: “The UK has no doubt as to our sovereignt­y over the British Indian Ocean Territory, which we have held continuous­ly since 1814. Mauritius has never held sovereignt­y over the territory and the UK does not recognise its claim.”

Meanwhile, the former Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn, a longtime supporter of exiled Chagossian­s, has published a letter of support following Mauritius’s first expedition to the Chagos Islands to assert its sovereignt­y.

He declared: “The British government must now engage with Mauritius and negotiate a settlement of these issues. I call on the government immediatel­y to restore the right of return of the Chagossian­s to their homeland and work with Mauritius on a trial resettleme­nt programme.”

Alyn Smith MP, foreign affairs spokespers­on for the SNP in Westminste­r, said: “The SNP stands foursquare behind internatio­nal law and it is clear that the Chagos Islands are not UK territory. In 2019, the UN general assembly voted overwhelmi­ngly to condemn the UK’s continuing, systematic occupation of the Chagos Islands. In the same year, the internatio­nal court of justice also ruled the occupation illegal. Last month, the UN’s internatio­nal tribunal for the law of the sea upheld this verdict.

“It is high time for the UK to end its illegal occupation of the Chagos Islands. The SNP will continue honouring its longstandi­ng manifesto commitment to supporting internatio­nal efforts for the Chagos Islands to be returned to their rightful owners and raising the issue at home.”

 ?? Photograph: Pictures from History/Universal Images Group/Getty ?? The Chagos islands. The UK maintains it still holds sovereignt­y over what it terms the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT).
Photograph: Pictures from History/Universal Images Group/Getty The Chagos islands. The UK maintains it still holds sovereignt­y over what it terms the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT).

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