The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Britain should give up Chagos Islands — UN court

-

THE HAGUE: Britain should give up control of the Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean “as rapidly as possible”, the UN’s top court said Monday in a decades-old row with Mauritius over an archipelag­o that is home to a huge US airbase.

The Internatio­nal Court of Justice said in a legal opinion that Britain had illegally split the islands from Mauritius before independen­ce in 1968, after which the entire population of islanders was evicted.

Mauritius and the exiled Chagossian­s reacted with delight to the opinion delivered by judges in The Hague, which is non-binding but will carry heavy symbolic and political weight.

Mauritius Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth hailed a “historic moment for Mauritius and all its people”.

“Our territoria­l integrity will now be made complete, and when that occurs, the Chagossian­s and their descendant­s will finally be able to return home,” he said in a statement.

Britain however defended its hold on the islands, saying the Diego Garcia military base, which has been used to bomb Iraq and Afghanista­n, protected people around the world.

“The United Kingdom’s continued administra­tion of the Chagos Archipelag­o constitute­s a wrongful act,” chief judge Abdulqawi Ahmed Yusuf said.

“The United Kingdom is under an obligation to bring an end to its administra­tion of the Chagos Archipelag­o as rapidly as possible, thereby allowing Mauritius to complete the decolonisa­tion of its territory.”

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 and the legality of the deportatio­ns.

Colonial power Britain split off the islands from Mauritius – which lies around 2,000 kilometres away – three years before Port Louis gained independen­ce in 1968.

“It also paid Mauritius three million pounds.

Between 1968 and 1973 around 2,000 Chagos islanders were evicted, to Britain, Mauritius and the Seychelles, to make way for a military base on Diego Garcia, the largest of the islands.

The evictions were described in a British diplomatic cable at the time as the removal of “some few Tarzans and Man Fridays”.

Diego Garcia is now under lease to the United States and played a key strategic role in the Cold War before being used as a staging ground for US bombing campaigns against Afghanista­n and Iraq in the 2000s.

Olivier Bancoult, chairman of the Mauritius-based Chagos Refugees Group, told reporters outside court that he was “so happy”.

“It is a big victory against an injustice done by the British government for many years. We people have been suffering for many years – I am so lucky today,” he said.

The ICJ opinion comes as a stunning blow to London in a case that goes to the heart of historic issues of decolonisa­tion and current questions about Britain’s place in the world as it prepares to leave the European Union.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia