(C) Common Dreams
This story was originally published by Common Dreams and is unaltered.
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“That’s When the Nightmare Started” [1]
['Clive Baldwin']
Date: 2023-02-15
Summary
Life was easy, it was like Paradise .... I was very sad when I realized we wouldn’t be able to go back [after a holiday trip to Mauritius in 1967]. We had left four brothers and a sister in Chagos. My mother cried and said to us, “Now we will live a very different life.” And that’s when the nightmare started.
— Louis Marcel Humbert, born in Peros Banhos, Chagos in 1955, speaking in April 2022
About 60 years ago, the United Kingdom government secretly planned, with the United States, to force an entire Indigenous people, the Chagossians, from their homes in the Chagos Archipelago. The Indian Ocean islands were part of Mauritius, then a UK colony. The two governments agreed that a US military base would be built on Diego Garcia, the largest of the inhabited Chagos islands, and the island’s inhabitants would be removed. The UK government split the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius, creating a new colony in Africa, the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT). So that it would not have to report to the United Nations about its continued colonial rule, the UK falsely declared that Chagos had no permanent population.
The reality was that a community had lived on Chagos for centuries. The Chagossians are predominately descendants of enslaved people, forcibly brought from the African continent and Madagascar to the then-uninhabited Chagos islands where they worked on coconut plantations under French and British rule. Over the centuries they became a distinct people with their own Chagossian Creole language, music, and culture.
But the UK and US governments treated them as a people without rights, who they could permanently displace from their homeland without consultation or compensation to make way for a military base. From 1965 to 1973, the UK and US forced the entire Chagossian population from all the inhabited Chagos islands, not only Diego Garcia but also Peros Banhos and Salomon. They abandoned them in Mauritius or Seychelles, where they lived in abject poverty.
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Years later, the UK paid, through the Mauritian government, a small amount of compensation to some Chagossians, and decades later awarded citizenship to Chagossians, but has otherwise refused to even discuss reparations to the Chagossians. The US, which has benefited from the military base ever since, has consistently denied any responsibility towards the Chagossian people.
In recent decades, much of the secret planning of the forced displacement has been exposed through the publication of official documents. They exposed not only the plans, but the blatant racism of UK officials toward the Chagossians that highlights the discriminatory nature of their treatment.
Chagossians of all generations have striven, including in litigation in domestic and international courts, for acknowledgment of the violations committed against them and recognition of their rights, notably the right to return home. Today, thousands of Chagossians live around the world, mostly in Mauritius, the UK, and Seychelles, but the UK government, with the involvement of the US, still prevents them from returning and permanently living in their homeland.
The UK government has since acknowledged that the treatment of the Chagossians was “shameful and wrong.” But both the UK and the US have refused to right the wrongs they have committed against the Chagossians for the last half century, now opposing their return on the grounds of cost and security.
The forced displacement of the Chagossians and ongoing abuses amount to crimes against humanity committed by a colonial power against an Indigenous people. UK colonial rule in the Chagos Archipelago, unlike in most of its other colonies in Africa, did not end in the 1960s, and it has continued at extraordinary cost to the people of Chagos. This colonial rule was built on systematic racism and ethnic and racial discrimination in the treatment of the Chagossians. Private comments about the Chagossians written by senior UK officials during the planning of the expulsion, calling the Chagossians “Men Fridays … whose origins are obscure” illustrates this discrimination. The UK authorities have continued to treat the predominately African Chagossians very differently from other islanders under their rule, such as in Cyprus and the Falklands, islands which have UK military bases. The UK has tried to treat Chagos as a territory where international human rights law does not apply. And the US has continued to benefit from the operation of its geopolitically strategic military base on Diego Garcia, while refusing to take responsibility for the crimes against the Chagossians.
For many years, the government of Mauritius has claimed the return of its sovereignty over the territory of Chagos. On November 3, 2022, the UK government announced that it had opened negotiations with Mauritius on the future of the Chagos islands, to “secure an agreement on the basis of international law to resolve all outstanding issues, including those relating to the former inhabitants of the Chagos Archipelago.” Even with this significant development, at the time of writing the Chagossians still cannot return to permanently reside on the islands, with many never having had the opportunity to visit since their families were forced to leave. It is unclear how any new agreement will affect them, including whether it will address the issue of reparations for the expulsion and decades of abuse. There is, currently, little transparency about the negotiations and no clear declaration that the Chagossian people will be effectively and meaningfully consulted in this decision that will affect them profoundly, and that their right to reparations, including the right to return, will be fully and effectively centered in the negotiations and guaranteed in the outcome.
This report, based on interviews with Chagossian people and extensive review and analysis of documents, examines the abuses committed by the UK and US governments against the Chagossian people, the decisions that led to their expulsion, and the abuses they suffered during and since their eviction from the Chagos islands.
The report explores the poor conditions under which the Chagossians lived in Mauritius, Seychelles, and, more recently, the UK; their efforts to reclaim their rights to permanently return home; and the failure of the UK and US governments to adequately compensate them or provide any other form of reparations.
In the 1960s, the UK and US secretly agreed to build a military facility on Diego Garcia, which, like the rest of the Chagos islands, was part of the British colony of Mauritius. The US wanted Diego Garcia without inhabitants. Under the plan, the UK would keep control of Chagos, despite the imminent independence of Mauritius, and would expel the population of the islands. The UK pressured the government of Mauritius, before independence, to give up Chagos. The UK then declared, in 1965, Chagos as a new colony—the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT)—the last colony the UK created, and now its last colony in Africa.
Click to expand Image Map of the Chagos Archipelago © 2023 John Emerson/Human Rights Watch
The UK, with the US, then expelled the entire Chagossian population over the next eight years. The UK government forced the entire population of Chagos, not only Diego Garcia, from their homes. UK officials have, as documents show, admitted to having lied in claiming that there were no permanent inhabitants of Chagos. Documents written at the time illustrate the institutional racism and bigotry behind the treatment of the Chagossians, with senior British officials writing and joking about the population in openly racist terms.
After the agreement with the US and the creation of the BIOT, the UK authorities expelled the population of Chagos in three stages—often using the coconut plantation companies on the islands to do so. First, from 1967 they prevented Chagossians who had left the islands temporarily, on holiday or for urgent medical treatment, from returning. People who, for any reason, had left Chagos assuming they were only on a short trip away were told that they could not return home and were separated from their families without any warning. The frequency of ships bringing food and other supplies to the islands from Mauritius was also drastically reduced. The next stage in the expulsion, once the US decided to proceed with the construction of the military base, involved the BIOT administrators telling the remaining population of Diego Garcia, in January 1971, that they had to leave. British officials emphasized the point by ordering the killing of the Chagossians’ dogs. Some were initially allowed to go to Peros Banhos and Salomon islands, still within Chagos. In the final stage, starting in June 1972, the authorities told the remaining population of Peros Banhos and Salomon islands to leave. By 1973, all Chagossians had been forced to leave the islands.
The BIOT authorities forced Chagossians to go to Seychelles or Mauritius. There, many lived in extreme poverty and experienced difficulty finding sufficient and adequate food, work, and housing. Chagossians said that some of those displaced, including children, died from the economic hardship and, they believe, from the emotional devastation (which they call “sagren”) of being torn from their homeland. They experienced discrimination in their new communities, and many have said they still experience severe economic hardship. After the UK government granted some Chagossians citizenship in 2002, many came to live in the UK, where they also described not being accepted, not having housing or work on arrival, and experiencing discrimination.
The US and UK governments paid considerable sums, including sums in kind, for the establishment of the US base on Diego Garcia. The UK financially compensated the Mauritian government for the loss of the Chagos territory. The coconut plantation company owners were bought out and compensated by the UK. In return for the base, the US gave the UK a substantial discount on nuclear weapons it sold to the UK.
But the Chagossians, who had suffered the international crime of forced displacement, initially received no compensation. Following demonstrations, spearheaded by Chagossian women, and litigation brought by Chagossians, the UK, on two occasions, paid the Mauritius government what amounted to a small sum for Chagossians in Mauritius, which was eventually paid to some Chagossians. But the UK government required Chagossians who received payments to sign, or thumbprint, a document purportedly giving up their right to return to Chagos. Those who signed it said that it was written only in English, a language unfamiliar to many of them, with legal terms that they did not understand nor had explained to them. Chagossians exiled to Seychelles received nothing.
Chagossians have struggled over the years for recognition of the harms done to them and their right to return. In 2000, a UK court declared the BIOT Immigration Ordinance of 1971 that authorized the forcible removal of the Chagossians from their homeland to be unlawful. Many of the secret documents from the 1960s were made public at this time, showing the deceit and racism behind the Chagossians’ expulsion. The then-UK government accepted the ruling, said it could not defend what had been done to the Chagossians in the past, and revoked the laws that prevented the Chagossians from returning and living in Chagos—except for the island of Diego Garcia where they were still legally banned from returning.
The Chagossians did not, however, receive adequate financial compensation from the US or UK governments, or the support they needed to restart their lives on the islands during this short-lived period, so none were able to return to live in Chagos. Then, in 2004, with Diego Garcia being used by the US as a key base in the so-called “Global War on Terror,” the UK government reversed its position. Queen Elizabeth II, on behalf of the government, issued new “Orders-in-council”—a legal device that allows the executive to avoid going through parliament—to once more ban Chagossians from returning to live on any of the islands.
The UK government has never provided an adequate explanation as to why it was considered viable in 2000 to lift the ban on Chagossians from permanently returning home, and yet the UK government considered it necessary to reinstate this ban after four years. Successive UK governments have argued that it is not possible for the Chagossians to return based on vague assertions of security and cost—the latter, they suggest, would place an unfair burden on the British taxpayer. The US has kept a low profile and side-stepped its responsibilities by claiming it is not responsible for the Chagossians.
In 2012, the UK government started a review of policy toward the Chagossians, commissioning a survey by the global firm KPMG that found that the vast majority of Chagossians it spoke to wished to return, that their return was practicable, especially with the cooperation of the US, and that the maximum cost would be approximately GBP£500 million. But in 2016, the UK again announced that it would block the return of Chagossians, once more claiming security and cost as its reasons. This has remained its position to present, as negotiations with Mauritius began in late 2022.
In 2019, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), in an advisory opinion, ruled that the UK had acted unlawfully in detaching Chagos from Mauritius and creating a new colony, the BIOT. The ICJ also stated that the rights of the Chagossians to be resettled should be addressed by the United Nations General Assembly. Until November 2022, the UK ignored this ruling.
This report reflects the views of Chagossians living in Mauritius, Seychelles, and the UK with whom Human Rights Watch spoke. Although there is no consensus about which country should control Chagos, all agreed that Chagossians should have the right to return, and the majority of those who spoke to Human Rights Watch, of all generations, said they personally would return to Chagos as soon as they could. They did not ask for the closure of the US base, but say they want to be able to live alongside it on Diego Garcia as well as the other habitable islands.
Human Rights Watch found that the abuses committed against Chagossians, as individuals and as an Indigenous people, to be serious violations of international human rights law and international criminal law. The violations were committed against those forced to leave their homes more than 50 years ago and continue against them and their descendants today who are denied their right to permanently return.
Human Rights Watch found that the continuing forced displacement of the Chagossians, the prevention of their permanent return to their homeland, and their persecution on racial and ethnic grounds amount to crimes against humanity. Crimes against humanity, including “deportation” and “persecutions” on racial grounds, were set out in the 1945 Charter (drafted by the US and UK governments, with France and the Soviet Union) that created the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, and have become part of customary international law. The prohibition of crimes against humanity is a preemptory norm of international law, meaning it is applicable to all states and no derogation is permitted. Crimes against humanity were also included in the statutes of the international tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.
Crimes against humanity are defined in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court as certain acts when committed as part of a “widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population”—which is defined as “a course of conduct” involving multiple such acts committed as part of a state policy to “commit such attack” (that is, a policy to commit the crime). It has become clear over the years that the decisions to expel the Chagossians, and to prevent them from returning, and the racial and ethnic discrimination—treating the Chagossians differently from other islanders under UK rule—were UK state policies.
The UK and Mauritius are states parties to the International Criminal Court, which acts as a court of last resort to determine individual criminal responsibility for crimes within its jurisdiction when national authorities do not conduct genuine proceedings.
Three apparent crimes against humanity have been committed against the Chagossians by UK authorities: “deportation or forcible transfer of population” as a continuing crime; “other inhumane acts,” which can include prevention of the return of a population to its home, as with the Rohingya in Myanmar; and persecution on the grounds of racial, ethnic, or other grounds. The first crime, at least, was jointly committed by UK and US authorities.
The information available shows that the Chagossians have been severely deprived of their rights by intentional acts because of their race and ethnicity. This was evident not only in the manner of their expulsion from Chagos, but in the institutional and systematic way that UK authorities continue to treat the Chagossians, as people whose rights, especially the right to return, need not be respected.
Human Rights Watch calls on the UK and US governments to provide full reparations to the Chagossian people in three key areas. First, the UK should provide restitution by immediately lifting the ban on Chagossians permanently returning to the Chagos islands. The UK and the US should also ensure financial and other support and cooperation to restore the islands and enable the Chagossians to return and live and work in dignity across the Archipelago, as they would have done if the UK and US had not forced them to leave.
Second, the UK and US should provide financial compensation to all Chagossians, regardless of whether they wish to or can return, for the harm suffered from the crimes committed against them. This would include the physical, psychological, and economic harms they suffered both during the forced displacement and ever since.
Third, the UK and US should provide satisfaction and a guarantee that similar crimes will not happen again. After consultations with the Chagossians, this could entail full apologies from the UK and US and their heads of state, including the British monarch, acknowledging the extent and nature of the crimes. The UK and US should publish all material concerning the treatment of the Chagossians. They should ensure investigations into these crimes and accountability for the individuals and state institutions most responsible.
The UK should ensure that the treatment of Chagossians today is free from racism and all forms of discrimination, starting with the UK acknowledging that all human rights obligations that apply in the UK also fully apply in the Chagos islands. This would end the double standards where the UK government has effectively treated Chagos as a territory where international human rights and criminal law does not apply, and where the inhabitants have no human rights protections.
Human Rights Watch also recommends that other governments, notably Mauritius, should publicly commit to support and assist the return to Chagos of all Chagossians, regardless of their nationality or current residence. Mauritius, the UK, and Seychelles should guarantee the rights and equality of Chagossians living in their territory, including ensuring full and equal citizenship, and rights of family reunification. Judicial officials in all states should consider investigating and prosecuting those implicated in crimes against humanity in national courts under the principle of universal jurisdiction and in accordance with national laws.
With the announcement in November 2022 of negotiations between the UK and Mauritius over the future of Chagos, it is vital that both countries ensure meaningful and effective consultations with the Chagossian people. The history of the last 60 years is of governments making deals that affect the future of the Chagossians but without involving them. Any future agreement concerning Chagos needs to be centered around the rights of the Chagossians, including the right to return, and full reparations for the decades of abuse.
The abuses against the Chagossians also show the failure of UK and other courts, as well as the European Court of Human Rights, to acknowledge and remedy ongoing colonial crimes, including recognizing them as crimes against humanity. International and domestic institutions, especially those responsible for addressing international crimes, should treat crimes against humanity committed by UK and US officials like those committed by any other state.
The history of colonial crimes, even those as current as against the Chagossians, is a history of a failure to recognize—let alone address—them as such. As the UN expert on truth, justice and reparations Fabián Salvioli, quoting Wolfgang Kaleck, said in 2021:
There have never been serious efforts to investigate colonial crimes before national or international courts, nor to punish any of the surviving perpetrators, nor sanction the governments involved or to compensate the victims for the ongoing health problems triggered by the crimes.
But the Chagossian story is also one of struggle and survival. The Chagossian people have not accepted the wrongs done to them and continue to persevere for their cause through their organization, activism, and the law. It is because of them that we know the history of the harms they endured. It is time to finally repair the wrongs that have been done.
Key Recommendations
To the United Kingdom government
Provide full, unconditional, and effective reparations to the Chagossian people based on meaningful and effective consultation with them: As part of full restitution, recognize their immediate and unconditional right to permanently return to Chagos, including to Diego Garcia. Ensure that the Chagos islands are restored so that the Chagossians can return to live permanently in dignity and prosperity, at a minimum standard equivalent to how they would live today had they not been expelled over 50 years ago. Provide full compensation to all Chagossians, everywhere in the world, for all the harms caused to them since 1965. Guarantee the non-repetition of similar abuses and crimes. Publish all material, including all government orders, confidential agreements, notes, and instructions on removal and prevention of return concerning the Chagossians and their displacement and make this available on a free and accessible database. Hold individuals responsible for crimes against humanity against the Chagossians accountable through investigations and fair trials Immediately declare the full application of all human rights and international criminal law treaties ratified by the UK to Chagos (BIOT). King Charles III should issue a full and unreserved apology to the Chagossian people for the crimes and other abuses committed against them by the United Kingdom, as called for by Chagossians, and reiterate that the UK government will guarantee full reparations for the harms they suffered and that such abuses will never be repeated.
To the United States government
Provide full, unconditional, and effective reparations to the Chagossian people based on meaningful and effective consultation with them.
Issue a full and complete apology and acknowledgement of all the harms done to the Chagossians from 1965 until today, including the crimes committed, as called for by Chagossians.
Contribute, with the UK, to the full reparations to the Chagossian people, including their right to permanently return, ensuring they can live in dignity and prosperity in Chagos, including on Diego Garcia, and their right to receive full financial compensation for the harms inflicted on them.
Guarantee such abuses will never happen again. Publish all material, including all government orders, confidential agreements, notes, and instructions on removal and prevention of return concerning the Chagossians and their displacement and make this available on a free and accessible database.
Immediately lift any remaining legal restrictions on, and publicly encourage Chagossians to work on the US military base in Diego Garcia and allow them to bring their families to live there.
To the Government of Mauritius
Repeat its declaration that it fully supports the right of all Chagossians to return to live in Chagos, wherever in the world they currently live and whatever their nationality.
Publicly express its support for full and effective reparations by the UK and US governments to the Chagossian people.
Publicly call for effective accountability for those responsible for crimes against humanity against the Chagossian people.
To the Governments of the UK and Mauritius, with the Governments of the US and India
In the context of the publicly announced negotiations between the UK and Mauritius over the Chagos Archipelago, ensure that the Chagossian people are centered in this process, effective and meaningful consultations are conducted with them, and ensure that any agreement provides for binding commitments by the UK and US Government to provide full and effective reparations and a commitment by all governments to honor the right of unfettered permanent return of the Chagossian people, to all the islands of Chagos. The commitment to an unfettered right of return applies equally to the Mauritian government should control over the Islands pass to them.
With respect to reparations, in addition to the right to return without restrictions, including to live on Diego Garcia, the agreement should also include restitution of Chagos so Chagossians can live there in dignity and prosperity; full compensation to all Chagossians for the harms suffered as a result of the forced displacement; and a guarantee that such atrocities will not be repeated.
·Recognize the Chagossians as an Indigenous people.
To all states
Support investigations and prosecutions for the crimes against humanity that have been and are being committed against Chagossians.
Methodology
This report focuses on the forced eviction and continued refusal to allow the return, by the UK government, with support from the US government, of the entire population of the islands and atolls of the Chagos Archipelago in violation of international human rights law and international criminal law. Many of the families evicted had lived for several generations on the islands.
The report is based on research undertaken between November 2021 and September 2022, during which Human Rights Watch interviewed 43 Chagossians in the UK, Mauritius, and Seychelles from various Chagossian representative groups, notably Chagos Refugees Group, Chagos Asylum People, Chagossian Voices, and Seychelles Chagossian Committee. Human Rights Watch also interviewed 14 others, including UK, US, and Mauritian government officials, members of parliament, lawyers, academics, analysts, and diplomats. Human Rights Watch also reviewed numerous documents, including government records, official memorandums, meeting minutes, statements, as well as court records, documents, and processes. We also analyzed videos and photographs, maps, and other materials.
Interviews took place in person in Croydon and London in the UK, in Port Louis, Mauritius, and in Victoria and Praslin, Seychelles, in locations considered private and secure by researchers and interviewees. Interviews were conducted in English and Creole or French with the aid of interpreters as needed. Researchers explained to each interviewee the purpose of the interview, its voluntary nature, the way in which the information would be used, and that no compensation would be provided.
Interviewees at times seemed distressed and emotional as they recounted their experiences. Researchers took care to avoid retraumatizing them, including by explaining the extent and line of questioning involved before the interview commenced and their right to stop at any point.
On December 7, 2022, Human Rights Watch sent a summary of the findings of this report to officials in the UK, US, and Mauritius governments. The government of Mauritius replied on January 10, 2023, the UK government on January 23, 2023, and the US government on January 24, 2023. Copies of the letters and government responses are available online as appendices to this report.
This report is dedicated to Dewa Mavhinga, Southern Africa director at Human Rights Watch, and dearly beloved colleague and friend, who died of illness in South Africa in December 2021 when preparing research for this report.
Background
The Chagos Archipelago is a group of islands and atolls in the Indian Ocean, approximately 2,200 kilometers northeast of the main island of Mauritius. The largest of the islands is Diego Garcia, about half of the archipelago’s land area.
Mauritius was occupied (and named) by the Dutch Republic from 1638 to 1710, and then by France in 1715, which named it Isle de France (Modern French: Île de France). France claimed Chagos and administered it as a dependency of the Isle de France. The United Kingdom occupied Isle de France in 1810 and changed its name back to Mauritius. Mauritius and all its dependencies, including Chagos, were ceded to the UK by France in the Treaty of Paris of 1814. From 1814 to 1965, the UK administered Chagos as a dependency of the colony of Mauritius. As is set out below, in 1965 the UK separated Chagos from Mauritius, creating the “British Indian Ocean Territory” (BIOT) as part of the plans that led to the expulsion of the Chagossians.
The Chagossian people
The Chagossians are a distinct people and community.
In the 18th century under French, and then British rule, hundreds of people from Madagascar and Mozambique and elsewhere in Africa were brought to Chagos as enslaved people and forced to work on coconut plantations, which under UK rule were largely owned by British nationals and Seychellois. The UK abolished slavery in most of its empire, including Mauritius, in 1833, and provided massive compensation for former owners of enslaved people, but not to the people who had been enslaved.
After the end of slavery, Chagossians—who, like the other formerly enslaved peoples, had received no compensation—remained on the islands, many working on coconut plantations. Others, including some from South Asia, were brought by the plantation owners to the islands as indentured laborers. Indentured labor was a system of bonded labor introduced following the abolition of slavery. Indentured laborers were recruited to work on sugar, cotton, and tea plantations, and rail construction projects in British colonies, including in the Caribbean, Africa, and Southeast Asia.
By 1900, there were 426 families living in the archipelago. About 60 percent were of African-Malagasy origin—descendants of the original enslaved population—while the remaining 40 percent were descendants of indentured laborers from South Asia. At that time, more than 75 percent regarded themselves as permanent inhabitants of the islands.
Over at least eight generations, Chagossians built their unique culture with a distinct Chagossian Creole language. The community would come together on Saturday nights to sing and tell stories. The islands had towns, churches, and later, schools. Chagossians were born, married, and buried on the islands.
Part of the distinct Chagossian culture is a specific type of music, Sega tambour Chagos. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) recognized this music in 2019 and placed it on its List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding. UNESCO describes this music as:
[B]orn from slavery and sung in Chagossian Creole particular to the islands. Sega tambour Chagos is a gentle, vibrant and rhythmic performance of music, song and dance based on the “tambour” – a large, circular instrument that is heated and then played to produce throbbing beats – which provides the basic rhythm. The lyrics consist of everyday experiences, often composed spontaneously, including narrations of sadness, happiness and rebellion. Sega tambour Chagos is also accompanied by traditional food and drink. Nowadays, new lyrics have been created associated with the nostalgic past and motherland, rooted in an experience of dislocation to ensure young people do not lose their roots and pride.
Chagossians who were born in the islands have described their lives there to Human Rights Watch as “wonderful” or “very sweet, like Paradise.” As well as working on the coconut plantations, the Chagossians had a tradition of fishing and building their own boats. Marie Mimose Furcy, born in Chagos in 1956, described closing her eyes in exile in Mauritius and imagining her life back in Chagos; she has written songs about her life there. Iline Talate Louis, born in Diego Garcia in 1961, said her life there until she was 10 was “beautiful.” Marie Jeanette Sabrie, born on Salomon Island in 1956, said that her life there was beautiful, and that there was food in abundance. She never thought she would leave the island. Claudette Pauline Lefade, born in Peros Banhos in 1952 and the current President of Chagos Asylum People, stated that “everyone had their garden to grow their vegetables, we lived on seafood.”
UK authorities, who governed Chagos as part of Mauritius for 150 years, seemed to have taken little interest in the islands or its inhabitants, except during World War II. Then, a small airstrip and military base was built on Diego Garcia, which was used by the UK armed forces, who left at the end of the war. During the war, the UK did not consider it necessary to displace the population of Chagos to build and secure its military base.
The work, and in many ways the entire lives, of the Chagossians were dominated by the companies that owned and ran the coconut plantations. A company called Société Huilière de Diego et Peros took control of the plantations in 1883, which were sold in 1962 to the Seychellois Chagos-Agalega Company. There were 3,000 hectares of coconut trees.
Several Chagossians told Human Rights Watch about life in the islands at this time, dominated by the companies. Rosemond Saminaden was born in Boddam Salomon on August 29, 1926. He started work as a trainee blacksmith at age 10 and was paid seven rupees per month in addition to provisions like rice, oil, and salt. The company staff would ring a bell at 6 a.m. every day to assign jobs to all islanders including children. Louis Mico Xavier, born in Peros Banhos in 1937, said, “I started working at age 12 because there was no school then. I was paid five rupees per month in a savings account, plus provisions. I never signed a contract of employment because I never left the island until I was 19 in 1956.” Furcy said, “If you didn’t show up for work for up to a week, you would be locked up in the island prison—a room—for one or two days. It was rare though because everyone knew they had to work.”
There was a form of segregation between company officials and Chagossians. Bernadette Dugasse, originally Bernadette Nourrice, was born on Diego Garcia in 1956. In 1958, the company manager ordered her father, a carpenter originally from Seychelles, to leave Diego Garcia for the Seychelles for making furniture for Chagossians, which violated company rules.
The population of Chagossians in 1965, just before the forced displacement began, is estimated at 1,500 to 1,750 Chagossians, with about 1,360 living on the islands. There were also temporary contract workers, mostly from Seychelles, who made up 20 to 30 percent of the inhabitants at this time.
UK and US planned forced mass displacement of the Chagossians
The life of the Chagossians in their homeland was ended by the UK and US governments in the 1960s and 1970s. By 1973, they had forcibly displaced the entire population.
UK and US plans to displace the Chagossians
In the 1960s, the UK government ended its direct colonial rule across much of Africa and in other parts of the world. In December 1960, the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 1514 (XV), the “Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples.” During the next decade many countries, including Mauritius, achieved independence from the UK and other European colonial powers.
However, the UK treated the Chagossians very differently from other colonized peoples who achieved independence in the 1960s. Beginning in 1964, the UK and US governments planned to build a military base on Diego Garcia. The details of these plans only emerged years later when some of the documents became public. These plans resulted in not only the UK maintaining its rule over Chagos after the independence of Mauritius in 1968, but also in the forced displacement of the entire population. The UK has retained control of Chagos and has kept the Chagossians from returning ever since. The US played a key role throughout in the displacement of the Diego Garcia population and a significant (if less clear) role in preventing their return since.
In February 1964, the US and UK governments started talks on the “strategic use of certain small British-owned islands in the Indian Ocean.” The US was using a “Strategic Island Concept” drawn up in the 1950s by Stuart Barber, a naval planner at the US Navy. A professor of political anthropology, David Vine, has described this as a plan to avoid new bases in populous areas “vulnerable to local non-Western opposition” and instead plan for military bases on small, lightly populated islands.
US officials said they were interested in establishing a military facility on Diego Garcia under the “exclusive control (without local inhabitants).” At the end of the 1964 talks, the US and UK delegations agreed that the UK government should be responsible for acquiring land, “resettling the population,” and providing compensation to the company owners and the Mauritius government.
This agreement effectively meant the removal of at least the entire population of Diego Garcia. As the documents and later court records show, this was planned in secret, without any consultation or agreement with the residents. Successive UK governments would spend nearly a decade, with the US, secretly planning and carrying out the forced displacement of the entire population of Chagos. It occurred under the Labour government of Prime Minister Harold Wilson, which took office in late 1964, and the Conservative government under Edward Heath that succeeded it in 1970. Similarly US involvement in the mass displacement of the Chagossians has continued under both Democrat and Republican administrations. Subsequent governments of both countries, whatever their political party, have continued to deny the Chagossians their right to return home.
A UK memorandum in 1964, a few months after the initial talks with the US, already referred to "the repatriation or resettlement of persons currently living on the islands selected." It went on to address the issue that would be at the heart of the UK’s attempt to justify expulsion—its claim that there were none, or only a few, permanent inhabitants. According to the memorandum:
The line taken with regard to those persons now living and working in the dependencies would relate to their exact status. If, in fact, they are only contract labourers rather than permanent residents, they would be evacuated with appropriate compensation and re-employment. If, on the other hand some of the persons now living and working on the islands could be considered permanent residents, i.e., their families have lived there for a number of generations, then political effects of their removal might be reduced if some element of choice could be introduced in their resettlement and compensation.
A key concern for the UK government from the start was to avoid reporting to the UN about its continued rule over a colony if it kept control of Chagos. In order to do this, it needed to claim there were no permanent inhabitants of Chagos, only “contract labourers” who, UK officials believed, could be forced to leave Chagos. Another 1964 UK government document stated:
Our understanding is that the great majority of [the islands’ residents] are there as contract labourers on the copra [dried coconut] plantations on a number of the islands; a small number of people were born there and, in some cases, their parents were born there too. The intention is, however, that none of them should be regarded as being permanent inhabitants of the islands. Islands will be evacuated as and when defence interests require this. Those who remain, whether as workers on those copra plantations which continue to function or as labourers on the construction of defence installations, will be regarded as being there on a temporary basis and will continue to look either to Mauritius or to Seychelles as their home territory …
In the absence of permanent inhabitants, the obligations of Chapter XI of the United Nations Charter will not apply to the territory and we shall not transmit information on it to the Secretary-General.
A June 1966 UK government document, a Minute, demonstrates why the UK wanted to deny that there were permanent inhabitants living on Chagos. A UK court in 2000 describes this Minute as expressing “considerable candour”:
They [the Colonial Office] wish to avoid using the phrase “permanent inhabitants” in relation to any of the islands in the territory because to recognise that there are permanent inhabitants will imply that there is a population whose democratic rights will have to be safeguarded and which will therefore be deemed by the UN Committee of Twentyfour to come within its purview.
In a Minute sent on November 8, 1965 from the UK Foreign Office to the UK Mission to the UN, the Foreign Office claimed that “the islands chosen have virtually no permanent inhabitants.” In 1965, during further UK-US talks, the UK stated that when the defense facilities were installed on the island “it would be free from local civilian inhabitants.” At this time, the UK ambassador to the UN asked that the phrase “virtually” be removed from a UK document that said “the Chagos have virtually no permanent inhabitants,” because if Chagos had any population, the UK would be accused of failing to carry out its obligations under the UN Charter to this population. The word ’virtually’ was removed.
While the UK was negotiating the independence of Mauritius, it had already planned to keep control of the Chagos Archipelago. In September 1965, the representatives of the colony of Mauritius and the UK government signed the “Lancaster House Agreement.” After much pressure from the UK, the government of Mauritius agreed to Chagos being detached from Mauritius. As part of the agreement, the UK agreed to pay the costs of resettlement of Chagossians, “compensation” to landowners—but not to Chagossians—and £3 million to the government of Mauritius. In 2019, the International Court of Justice determined that this agreement was not freely entered into and concluded that “it is not possible to talk of an international agreement, when one of the parties to it, Mauritius … was under the authority of [the United Kingdom].”
In November 1965, following the “agreement” with the government of Mauritius, the UK government declared the new “British Indian Ocean Territory” (BIOT), consisting of the Chagos Archipelago, detached from Mauritius, and three island groups the UK government detached from Seychelles. Mauritius became independent from the UK in 1968. In June 1976, when Seychelles attained independence, the UK government returned the three island groups—Aldabra, Farquhar, and Desroches—it had included in the BIOT to Seychelles rule.
Four days after the creation of the territory, the UK government in London instructed the new BIOT administration: “Essential that contingency planning for evacuation of existing population from Diego Garcia … should begin at once.”
Another UK government document from this time starkly spelled out the UK and the US’s involvement:
10. The primary objective in acquiring these islands from Mauritius and the Seychelles to form the new “British Indian Ocean Territory” was to ensure that Her Majesty's Government had full title to, and control over, these islands so that they could be used for the construction of defence facilities without hindrance or political agitation and so that when a particular island would be needed for the construction of British or United States defence facilities Britain or the United States should be able to clear it of its current population. The Americans in particular attached great importance to this freedom of maneuvre, divorced from the normal considerations applying to a populated dependent territory. These islands were therefore chosen not only for their strategic location but also because they had, for all practical purposes, no permanent population.
11. It was implied in this objective, and recognised at the time, that we could not accept the principles governing our otherwise universal behaviour in our dependent territories, e.g. we could not accept that the interests of the inhabitants were paramount and that we should develop self-government there.
There was some opposition within the UK government to the planned displacement of the Chagossians. In an internal document in May 1966, UK Foreign Office legal adviser Henry Darwin wrote:
This is really fairly unsatisfactory. We detach these islands – in itself a matter which is criticised. We then find, apart from the transients, up to 240 “Ilois”, whom we propose either to resettle (with how much vigour of persuasion?) or to certify, more or less fraudulently, as belonging somewhere else. This all seems difficult to reconcile with the “sacred trust” of Art 73 [of the UN Charter], however convenient we or the US might find it from the viewpoint of defence.
Despite the concerns raised, the UK and US signed an “Agreement concerning the Availability for Defence Purposes of the British Indian Ocean Territory” on December 30, 1966. A confidential Agreed Minute of the same date stated that the UK would take “administrative measures” including “resettling any inhabitants” of the islands. The agreement was due to last 50 years, but the UK and US extended the lease in 2016 by another 20 years, to 2036.
In April 1967, the BIOT administration (that is the UK authorities) bought out the Chagos-Agalega company for £600,000, thus becoming the sole landed property owner in the BIOT. Later that year, it assigned management of the plantations to former managers of the company, whose new company was called Moulinie and Company (Seychelles), Limited.
At this time, the BIOT administration ordered the company to prevent Chagossians who had left the islands temporarily from returning to Chagos. In 1968, after the company asked to be allowed to bring back Chagossians to work on the plantations, the BIOT administration permitted them to replace the Chagossians with temporary Seychellois workers.
Contract workers on Chagos were still largely limited to Diego Garcia and formed only a small and temporary part of the resident population. Felix Phares, who was recruited along with several others by the Moulinie company from Seychelles in 1968, said:
Seychellois contract workers formed about 20 percent of workers on Diego Garcia while the natives [permanent residents] were by far the largest group. There were only a few contract workers from Mauritius because the plantation owner and hiring company was Seychellois.
Another confidential note by a UK Foreign Office lawyer, Anthony Aust, on October 23, 1968, highlighted the UK’s disregard for the law in expelling the Chagossians:
There is nothing wrong in law or in principle to enacting an immigration law which enables the Commissioner to deport inhabitants of BIOT. Even in international law there is no established rule that a citizen has a right to enter or remain in his country of origin/birth/nationality etc. A provision to this effect is contained in Protocol No 4 to the European Convention on Human Rights but that has not been ratified by us, and thus we do not regard the UK as bound by such a rule. In this respect we are able to make up the rules as we go along and treat the inhabitants of BIOT as not “belonging” to it in any sense.
In 1969, a Minute from the UK foreign secretary to the prime minister stated:
I agree with the conclusion reached in the paper that on balance the best plan will be to try to arrange for these people, all of whom are citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies or of Mauritius or both, to return to the Seychelles or Mauritius. The people with whom we are concerned are working in the Chagos under contract and own no property or other fixed assets there. However, some of them have established roots in Chagos and I should naturally have wished to consult at least these in advance of any decisions about their future, if this had been possible. Officials have examined closely the possibility of giving them some element of choice, but have advised that this would seem wholly impracticable .… In short I ask my colleagues to agree that … we should aim at the return of the inhabitants of the whole Chagos Archipelago to the Seychelles and Mauritius.
A 1970 note from a Foreign Office legal adviser said that a key purpose of laws restricting the right of Chagossians to remain and live in Chagos was to “maintain the fiction that the inhabitants of Chagos are not a permanent or semi-permanent population.” In a paragraph entitled "Maintaining the fiction," he said that keeping any population in the BIOT increased the risk of having to report to the United Nations about a colony.
In December 1970, the US Congress announced approval for the construction of a defense facility on Diego Garcia. The US government had told the UK government shortly beforehand that it wanted Diego Garcia evacuated by July 1971.
The BIOT administrator, John Todd, visited the islands in January 1971, and told the assembled inhabitants of Diego Garcia that "we intended to close the island in July." He said that Peros Banhos and Salomon could continue for some time.
In March 1971, in a US government document concerning the remaining inhabitants of Diego Garcia, Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, then US chief of naval operations, commented that they “absolutely must go.”
A UK government document dated March 12, 1971, states that it had been accepted by ministers that "our best course is to resettle, as quickly as practicable, the entire population of the Chagos Archipelago," notwithstanding that the US authorities had recently confirmed that it was only Diego Garcia that was likely to be required for the foreseeable future. It was not considered appropriate to "clear out Diego Garcia" alone because the other islands might be required one day, the possibility that this might be required discouraged new investment, and "third, we do not wish to be accountable to the United Nations for any permanent inhabitants of BIOT."
Abuses Against the Chagossian People
Forced mass displacement of the population of Chagos
Between 1967 and 1973, the entire population of Chagos was forced, directly or indirectly, to leave their homes, with nearly all having to move to the main island of Mauritius or to the Seychelles, thousands of kilometers away. Many of the orders were carried out by officials of the Moulinie company, who had been administrators of the islands, but it is clear the instructions were a deliberate policy by successive UK governments and officials, and, at least with respect to the inhabitants of Diego Garcia, part of a joint plan with the US authorities.
The methods used to force the inhabitants from their homes varied and took place over a period of years. The British authorities began with clandestine methods of forcing people to leave, including preventing people from returning home after they had left Chagos, they thought temporarily, for holidays or family emergencies; and, by making the conditions of life for Chagossians difficult if not impossible, such as by stopping teachers coming to Chagos to teach in schools. Later, the authorities ordered or otherwise directly intimidated the remaining population to leave, including by killing their dogs. The residents of Diego Garcia were the first Chagossians directly forced to leave once the base started being built. All the population of the island had been forced out by 1971, some living for two more years on other islands in Chagos. In 1973, the remaining inhabitants of the other islands in Chagos were forced to leave their homes.
Chagossians today remember how their families were forced to leave. One of the first steps the UK authorities took was to stop school and medical staff coming to the islands. Olivier Bancoult and Marie Mimose Furcy were siblings, with two other brothers and one sister, living with their family on Peros Banhos. As children, they were affected by the decision of the authorities to stop teachers coming to Chagos, part of the attempt to make conditions of life difficult for the Chagossians. Furcy, who was born in 1956, said she went to school until she was 8 years old, but then the teachers, who used to come from Mauritius and remain in Chagos for two years, stopped coming, and she never received an education. It remains a source of great regret to her. Similarly, Iline Talate Louis, born in 1961, said she did not go to school because there was no teacher.
Rachel Prosper, a nurse who had been born on Seychelles and moved to Chagos in the final years before the displacement, said:
I started working as a nurse in Diego Garcia in 1970 when my husband, Willie Prosper, was hired as the assistant manager of the Moulinie Company. I took on the job of nurse and midwife all by myself. There was nothing in the clinic except what I brought with me like cotton wool, antiseptic, and razors. Already at that time there was talk of closing the island, so the clinic was mostly empty with no drugs or equipment. I heard there’d been a nurse before me who had also gone back to Mauritius. A medical attendant I met there also left on the next boat that came through.
Subsequently the UK authorities, sometimes acting through the company, started preventing Chagossians returning to their homes when they had left the islands temporarily, not aware this was going to lead to their permanent exile.
On March 30, 1968, when Bancoult was 4 and Furcy was 13, their youngest sister was injured in an accident on Peros Banhos. Their parents took the whole family to Mauritius for treatment for her, fully intending to return and leaving their belongings in their home. Three months later, their sister died from an infection. Their mother went to the company office to arrange their return to Peros Banhos. Bancoult was with her when the company officer told them they could not return home as Chagos had been given away to build a US military base. Their mother, they said, “would not accept this.”
Louis Humbert was born in Peros Banhos in 1955 and lived there with his family. He said that in 1967 he and his mother and brothers traveled to Mauritius on holiday. But when they tried to return to Chagos some months later, and his mother went to the agents’ office to book their return trip home, the agent told her that people were no longer allowed to return to Chagos because it was about to be closed. This made him very sad, and split up his family, as four brothers and his sister remained in Chagos. He said, “that’s when the nightmare started.”
Suzelle Baptiste, born in Diego Garcia in 1965, said her mother had to take her and her twin brother to Seychelles when they were 11 months old as her brother was ill. When her brother got better, and her mother tried to take them all back to Diego Garcia, the company told her that they could not return there as the island was being closed.
By 1971, the authorities were ordering the remaining inhabitants to leave, starting with those living on Diego Garcia. Talate Louis said her parents were told in meetings in Diego Garcia in 1971 by the administrator that they had to leave the island, as it had been sold. She said they were overwhelmed by this. They went to Peros Banhos for six months, but then the administrator told them that they had to leave for Mauritius.
Rosemone Bertin was born in 1955 and grew up on Salomon with four sisters and six brothers. In 1972, after she had a baby, the administrator told her family that the UK had said they had to leave, and if they did not go, they would not have food.
In 1971, the BIOT commissioner and governor of the Seychelles, Sir Bruce Greatbatch, enacted an Immigration Ordinance that made it unlawful for any person to enter or remain in the Chagos Archipelago without a permit. This law did not apply to members of the British armed forces or UK government officials.
The same year, Greatbatch ordered all the dogs on Diego Garcia to be killed, an order that was carried out by company manager Marcel Moulinie. Moulinie described later how he first tried shooting the dogs, then poisoning them. Eventually more than 1,000 dogs, including pets, were gassed with exhaust fumes, from pipes attached to the exhaust pipes of US military vehicles. Talate Louis said her family’s dog was killed; they felt it was done to make them leave.
In July 1971, the Nordvaer ship came from the Seychelles to Diego Garcia to take the inhabitants away. It took some of the islanders to Salomon and Peros Banhos before “limping” with engine trouble to Mahé, on the Seychelles. The Isle of Farquhar, a ship belonging to Moulinie & Co., was chartered the same year by the BIOT government, arriving in Diego Garcia early in September and then sailing to Peros Banhos and Salomon with Chagossian families.
Chagossians remained on Peros Banhos and Salomon for another two years, but conditions worsened as food supplies declined, due to decisions by the UK (through the BIOT administration) and the company. Milk supplies ran out and women fed children a mixture of coconut milk and sugar instead.
In 1973, the final forced removals of Chagossians took place. Rosemond Saminaden, who lived on Peros Banhos, said, “the company staff told us we had to leave the island because it had been sold but that they had houses and work waiting for everyone in Mauritius. So, we had no choice but to get on the boat. Those promises were, however, lies.”
On May 26, 1973, the Nordvaer left Peros Banhos for Mauritius via the Seychelles; it arrived on June 13, 1973, carrying 8 men, 9 women, and 47 children. This was the last of the Chagossian population removed from Chagos; the plantations were closed.
The final boat trips were particularly difficult. Talate Louis, who at age 10 was on the Nordvaer with her family in 1971, said that initially for the children it felt like a holiday, but for the adults it was terrible. They were transported in the bottom of the boat, “like animals,” and all had to sleep together. Bertin, whose family had been told they had to leave Salomon, said her trip on the Nordvaer to Mauritius with a 6-month-old baby was “bad.” She also described how the Chagossians were put in the bottom of the boat. Greatbatch had insisted on rescuing horses from Diego Garcia—these were put at the top of the boat, on the deck.
Chagossians who were taken from Diego Garcia to Seychelles in 1971 were forced to live in an unused part of the prison in Mahe, for eight days, before another boat took them to Mauritius.
Liseby Elyse, born in Peros Banhos in 1953, said that:
The condition of our evacuation was terrible. We shared the cabin with animals like pigs and horses. People fell sick, there were no toilets, so we defecated in the same room. I saw two people die on the boat and their bodies were thrown into the sea. They weren’t people I knew personally because they only got on the boat when we stopped in Seychelles.
Elyse said that she was pregnant when the boat left Peros Banhos in April 1973, “but because of the trauma after we arrived in Mauritius on May 2, I lost my pregnancy two weeks later. It made me so angry to lose my baby this way. I was so sick when we arrived that I had to stay below the deck for many days.”
Pervasive Abuses After Forced Displacement
By 1973, the entire population of Chagos had been forcibly displaced. But the abuses against them did not end. In both Mauritius and Seychelles, where they were initially forced to live, they faced extreme poverty and discrimination. The situations that Chagossians have described to Human Rights Watch involved forms of deprivation linked to poverty, including lack of access to adequate health services and education, and insufficient and inadequate food, sanitation, and housing. Many of these problems have persisted to the present.
The UK, with the US, was responsible for their situation, but had done nothing to ensure the Chagossians would not face extreme poverty. Promises made by BIOT authorities and company managers to the Chagossians that they would have work and housing waiting for them were not true. In 1972, the UK paid the small amount of £650,000 to Mauritius for the resettlement of all Chagossians, and not until 1982, after being forced into action by a court case, did the UK government give an additional amount of compensation to Chagossians in Mauritius; it gave no compensation at all to those in Seychelles. But still the UK refused to allow Chagossians to permanently return home. Chagossians described how their forced exile resulted in extreme mental and physical harm, from the pain of being permanently separated from their home to the daily struggle of finding enough food for their children.
Poverty, Stigma and Discrimination in Mauritius
Chagossians who were forced to move to the main island of Mauritius shared very similar accounts with Human Rights Watch. They described how, after being forced to leave Chagos, where food was abundant, they were reduced to living in extreme poverty, including severe hunger that they believed led to the deaths of family members. They also described the ongoing profound sense of shock and loss that still resonates with those who were forced to leave their homes as children.
The final arrivals of Chagossians in Port Louis on the Nordvaer in 1973 led to Chagossians demonstrating and refusing to leave the boat. They were eventually given housing—but in terrible conditions.
Rosemond Saminaden, who had been forced to leave Peros Banhos in 1973, said the company staff told them:
We had to leave the Island because it had been sold but that they had houses and work waiting for everyone in Mauritius. So, we had no choice but to get on the boat. Those promises were, however, lies. We arrived in Mauritius to find that no such arrangements had been made for us. The captain of the boat ... was so distressed by our conditions that he threatened to take us right back to Peros Banhos because he had never been involved in transporting people who had nowhere to go. He kindly allowed us to stay on his boat and then sleep in the harbor for three days. Paul Moulinie, the Chagos plantation company owner, was the only one who gave me and a few others MUR 10 [10 Mauritian rupees, or $1.84] each when he visited us on the docks.
Saminaden said: “Immigration officials then offered us an uncompleted abandoned estate occupied by animals. We refused this and then they took us to the dock workers estate where we lived for 15 years. It was only slightly better than the cow shed—it was one bedroom for my entire family to live in. But it was rent free, and we had no money.”
Bancoult and Furcy said that after Chagos, life in Mauritius was “very difficult.” At first the entire family lived in a very small room in their grandmother’s home, with eight people sharing two mattresses. They moved out to a hut with a straw roof, held together by cow excrement. But even there, they said their family could not pay the rent. Furcy described the shock and inability to feed the family as breaking her father’s heart, who started crying like a child. Their father had a stroke, and their mother had to find temporary work. They had virtually no communication with Chagos. After their forced departure their grandfather died in Chagos after being electrocuted, but it took four years before their mother found out.
Talate Louis said, “the misery began [for us] in Mauritius.” She described how after arriving in Mauritius they had to live in the Bois Marchand area with animals. Her grandmother, mother, and six children had to live in one room together. Her baby brother died there because her mother’s milk dried up, and two other brothers also died. A few years later they moved to a house, but she received no education. After “much struggle,” with her mother being one of the leaders of the Chagossian women, they received some compensation in the 1980s. Her mother got 36,000 MUR (£1,803), and a group of Chagossians put cash together to get a house. When she was 14, she started working in a factory. She said that over the years, life got better with help from friends and work colleagues, but it remained difficult with considerable discrimination against Chagossians. They found it very hard to get employment with the government, and she said that Mauritians resented the Chagossians coming there.
Bertin also described life in Mauritius as “misery.” She said her family did not have enough food, and when her baby was ill, she had to walk 30 kilometers to the hospital as she could not afford the bus fare. She worked as a maid and cleaner, but had to get food from dustbins, and a little butter and milk each day from a convent for her baby. Without that she said, her baby would not have survived.
Marie Jeanette Sabrie, born in Salomon in 1956, said that “life in Mauritius was harsh and tough for my family. We lived in abject poverty and were constantly objects of laughter to the locals here.”
Chagossians described discrimination that they and their parents and grandparents experienced in Mauritius. Louis Elyse, born in Mauritius in 1981, said that growing up, people would write on walls “You’re not welcome, go back to your islands,” and people would make fun of him for being Chagossian, but that he is very proud to be Chagossian.
A March 2021 report on the situation of Chagossians in Mauritius by the UN Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent and the UN special rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance states that “information received indicates a specific experience of racial discrimination against the exiled Chagossian population.”
Discrimination and Loss of Identity in Seychelles
Bernadette Dugasse, born Bernadette Nourrice in Diego Garcia in 1956, described life in Seychelles as “really hard,” with their family of six living in one room, and her mother forced to work all day and late into the evening. She said her family as Chagossians were told they did not belong in Seychelles, and they were foreigners. As she did not have her birth certificate, she found it “very hard” to be accepted when she attended school. Her brother, Bernard Nourrice, also born on Diego Garcia, said that he never got a passport in Seychelles, just an ID with a number that means, he said, “you are not Seychellois.”
Laurenzia Piron, 77, who was born on Diego Garcia to parents and grandparents also born in Chagos but was deported to Seychelles because she had married a Seychellois contractor in Chagos, said, “when we arrived in the Seychelles, people called us ‘anara’ meaning ‘unvaccinated’ because we were not vaccinated in Chagos. They told people not to mingle with ‘disease-ravaged’ people like us.”
Family members were separated both before and during the deportations when traveling Chagossians were disallowed from returning to the islands. Cyril Bertrand was 21 when he was refused passage to rejoin his parents and siblings in Peros Banhos in 1969 after a medical operation in Seychelles. He said:
My entire family was still in PB [Peros Banhos]. I was left to wander about and to fend for myself, but I didn’t have any identification documents that would allow me to live and work legally in Seychelles .… I couldn’t even get married until my Seychellois fiancée managed to trace my family, who had been deported to Mauritius in 1970, to send my documents.
Due to the stigma, several Chagossians in Seychelles said they deliberately try to mask their identity. Diego Garcia-born Ginette Charles said, “We have suffered discrimination. People call us ‘anarah’ or ‘Mazambique’ meaning ‘uncivilized.’ Even our national ID card, bears a distinctive number 5 that identifies us as being born in Chagos to distinguish us from Seychellois born here.”
A Seychellois anthropologist, Jean Claude Mahoune, who has worked to highlight the issues Chagossian people face in Seychelles, said:
You will hardly find a Seychellois with a Chagossian Creole accent because they try to hide it to avoid being picked on. They are discriminated against in housing, access to finance, loans, land and jobs. They basically have refugee status in Seychelles where they continue to be insulted in public places and told to go home and eat coconuts.
Discrimination and Abuse in the UK
Following the UK’s granting of citizenship to some Chagossians in 2002, many of them came to live in the UK. But those interviewed by Human Rights Watch describe facing several challenges. Louis Elyse came to the UK in 2003, saying in Mauritius they had been promised housing and jobs in the UK. In reality, no one was there to receive them and address their immediate concerns. He said he slept at Gatwick Airport in London for a week, and then outside a government social security office in Crawley, near the airport, for another week. He was eventually given accommodation in a lodge and has since remained in the UK.
Rosy Leveque’s grandmother was not allowed to return home to Peros Banhos in Chagos in 1968 after giving birth in Mauritius to her mother. Her mother came by herself to the UK at the same time as Louis Elyse. She described a similar experience of having to sleep at Gatwick Airport for days as they had no housing or jobs for them. Eventually, her mother got a job cleaning toilets (she had been a tailor in Mauritius) and saved money for Leveque’s father, and then her and her brother, to come to the UK.
In 2022, the UK Parliament passed the Nationality and Borders Act, which provides for anyone of Chagossian descent to apply to become a British citizen or a British Overseas Territories citizen, if they are not one already.
Elyse described this law as significant but said Chagossians in the UK were still living very difficult lives, with the UK government creating more barriers to them living in the UK through “life in the UK” and language tests that it applies to non-UK citizens. He said that Chagossians “always have to fight and never have it easy.” Leveque, who campaigned for this law, said the “right of return and nationality are two completely different things. It is a victory in terms of those families who are separated, and they can be reunited, but it doesn’t stop there.”
Chagossians said they faced discrimination and bigotry in the UK. Dugasse, who moved to the UK in 2005, described “horrible comments” she receives in the UK when she does interviews on British TV, with commentators telling her to go back to where she came from. But, she noted, she cannot “go back” because of the policies of the UK and US governments.
Loss, “Derasine,” and “Sagren”
Although some of the Chagossians interviewed by Human Rights Watch described their material conditions having improved from the extreme poverty they endured in the 1970s, their sense of loss of being forced to leave their homeland persisted.
Chagossians use the word “derasine” to describe this. Minority Rights Group International described this term, quoting David Vine’s “Dérasiné: The Expulsion and Impoverishment of the Chagossian People”:
The Kreol word the Chagossian people most often use to describe their removal from the archipelago is “derasine” which derives from deraciner in French and is related to “deracinate” in English. The Derasine Report suggests that the choice of this word has two facets for the Chagossian people. It is capable of meaning “to uproot” or “to tear away from one’s native land” evidencing the Chagossian people’s deep psychological attachment to the Chagos Islands. Further, the word can also be defined as “to eradicate”, a reference to the threat that expulsion poses to their communal survival.
Vine, a professor of political anthropology who has studied the Chagossians for many years, described how many Chagossians died at an early age, with one group recording at least 44 deaths by 1975 in Mauritius “because of unhappiness, poverty and lack of medical care” and with at least 11 other Chagossians committing suicide. Another report said that by 1975, at least 1 in 40 Chagossians in Mauritius had died of starvation and disease. Vine described a World Health Organization (WHO)-funded study that looked at the concept of “sagren,” which explains illness and death among Chagossians. Sagren, according to this WHO study, is “nostalgia for the Chagos Islands. It is the profound sadness of facing the impossibility of being unable to return to one’s home in the archipelago.”
UK and US Prevention of Chagossians’ Return to Chagos
For 50 years, successive UK governments, with US involvement, have continued to prevent the Chagossians from returning home. For at least the last 20 years, UK ministers and officials have claimed financial cost as one of the main reasons for opposing their return.
The one exception was for a few years following a 2000 court ruling when the UK government acknowledged that Chagossians could return to most of the islands and removed the laws legally preventing their return. However, even then, the UK government (through the BIOT administration) commissioned a “feasibility study” that claimed that long-term return would be prohibitively expensive. A UK House of Commons Briefing Paper described this 2002 study as being “viewed by many as seriously flawed.”
The UK’s brief acceptance in principle of the Chagossians’ right to return to some of the islands ended in 2004. That year, Queen Elizabeth II, acting on behalf of the UK government, issued two “Orders in Council,” declaring that no one had the right to live in BIOT or enter and remain there without authorization. The UK government had, yet again, not consulted Chagossians about this. The UK government claimed in 2004 that although it may be feasible to resettle the islands in the short term, resettlement is “likely to become less feasible over time,” due to what it claimed where the risk of flooding events due to increase in sea levels. However, there has been no suggestion from the US nor the UK that the military base on Diego Garcia will become “less feasible” due to this supposed risk of flooding of the Chagos islands.
In April 2010, the UK announced the creation of a marine protected area (MPA) around the Chagos Archipelago. However, a document published by The Guardian and Wikileaks suggested that the UK’s motivation was to make it impossible for Chagossians to return home. It contained a record of what was said at a meeting on May 12, 2009, between a US political counselor and three senior UK officials. The record includes a note of the UK officials pressing the US to continue to say it “requires” the entire BIOT for defense purposes.
The US official who authored the note headlined a section describing the views of UK officials as “Je Ne Regrette Rien” (I regret nothing):
[The UK official] observed that BIOT has “served its role very well,” advancing shared U.S.-UK strategic security objectives for the past several decades. The BIOT “has had a great role in assuring the security of the UK and U.S. – much more than anyone foresaw” in the 1960s, [the UK official] emphasized. “We do not regret the removal of the population,” since removal was necessary for the BIOT to fulfill its strategic purpose, he said. Removal of the population is the reason that the BIOT's uninhabited islands and the surrounding waters are in “pristine” condition.”
[Another UK official] stressed that the exchange of notes governed more than just the atoll of Diego Garcia but expressly provided that all of the BIOT was “set aside for defense purposes.” (Note: This is correct. End Note.) She urged Embassy officers in discussions with advocates for the Chagossians, including with members of the “All Party Parliamentary Group on Chagos Islands (APPG),” to affirm that the USG [US government] requires the entire BIOT for defense purposes. Making this point would be the best rejoinder to the Chagossians' assertion that partial settlement of the outer islands of the Chagos Archipelago would have no impact on the use of Diego Garcia. She described that assertion as essentially irrelevant if the entire BIOT needed to be uninhabited for defense purposes.
The 2009 cable concludes with the US official expressing support for using a marine reserve to prevent any of the Chagossians returning to live in the BIOT:
Establishing a marine reserve might, indeed, as the FCO [official] stated, be the most effective long-term way to prevent any of the Chagos Islands’ former inhabitants or their descendants from resettling in the BIOT.
In 2015, a tribunal under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) ruled that the UK had breached its obligations under UNCLOS in establishing the Marine Protected Area (MPA). A case brought by Olivier Bancoult of the Chagos Refugees Group (CRG) in the UK courts challenged the UK’s creation of the MPA, on the basis the real reason was to make it impossible for Chagossians to return to live in the islands. The UK Supreme Court dismissed the case.
In 2012, the UK government announced a review of BIOT policy, including the possibility of allowing Chagossians to return. Through the BIOT administration, it commissioned a further feasibility study by KPMG International Ltd. on resettlement of Chagossians in Chagos. In January 2015, KPMG released its study, which concluded that resettlement was possible although costs could vary significantly.
KPMG estimated costs of resettlement ranging from £32 million to £420 million over several years, depending on the extent of the resettlement. It concluded that “[t]here are no insurmountable legal obstacles that would prevent a resettlement on BIOT,” and that “many environmental and logistic problems can be overcome with sufficient technical and financial resources (as witnessed by artificial shore defenses on Diego Garcia, protecting the Naval Support Facility, and costing many millions of US dollars).”
The study summarized consultations with Chagossians in Mauritius, Seychelles, and the UK. Its key findings were that “[a]ttendees at all consultations expressed a preference for returning to BIOT permanently [including Diego Garcia]. It was clear that temporary visits to BIOT is not an acceptable option for the Chagossians” and that Chagossians wish to have “[a] modern standard of living.”
A briefing to the UK prime minister by his national security adviser on resettlement of the Chagossians in February 2015 suggested that the main issue for the UK government was cost:
As for my advice, this really does come down to the balance between righting what was unquestionably a serious historic wrong, and the on-going costs and liabilities …. Where I do think there are significant problems, however, is around costs. It is easy to imagine the whole thing escalating and our getting involved in building runways and harbours and accommodation blocks, while struggling to attract hotels and tourism, and finding ourselves committed to indefinite social security support because of lack of job opportunities. In short, it can be done, but it would almost certainly turn out a great deal more expensive than even the highest estimates in the feasibility study.
Despite the clear evidence that return of the Chagossians was feasible, the UK government on November 16, 2016, said it would continue to oppose return of Chagossians on the grounds of “feasibility, defence and security interests and cost to the British taxpayer.” Bancoult said this amounted to “putting the KPMG report in the bin.” The 2016 statement by the UK government appears to still represent its position, having been repeated almost word for word by Dominic Raab, then foreign secretary, in a letter in November 2020.
The UK government also said—at the same time it announced it continued to oppose the return of Chagossians in 2016—that it would allocate funding that “addresses the most pressing needs of the community by improving access to health and social care and to improved education and employment opportunities. Moreover, this fund will support a significantly expanded programme of visits to BIOT for native Chagossians.” The promised funding amounted to £40 million over 10 years. In 2023, the UK government website states that “[t]he government has funded a number of community projects in the UK and Mauritius and is working to make more support available.” Speaking in 2021, Bancoult said there has been one heritage visit, and nothing has been done to improve conditions for the Chagossians by the UK government since the announcement of the plan.
In a letter to Human Rights Watch in January 2023 on behalf of the UK government, minister Lord Goldsmith said: “Disbursing these funds has been challenging, but they have supported several Heritage Visits to the islands for Chagossians and a number of projects in the UK and Mauritius. We remain committed to delivering on this commitment and have recently launched new projects in the UK and Mauritius. We regularly engage with different Chagossian groups to seek their views.”
The US base on Diego Garcia continues to employ nationals from around the world, including from the Philippines and Mauritius. But Chagossians said they do not believe they can work there, originally because of an outright ban and currently due to the prohibition on families joining them on Diego Garcia or even residing on the outer islands.
In 2021 and 2022, 173 Sri Lankan asylum seekers were brought to Diego Garcia by UK forces who had rescued them in the Indian Ocean. They are, according to media reports, housed in a fenced camp on the military base. As of September 2022, 116 remained, and others had requested to return to Sri Lanka. One of the lawyers said that the UK government’s position is that the UN Refugee Convention does not apply to Diego Garcia. This illustrates, first, that it is possible for civilians to live in Diego Garcia, even on the base, but also that the UK continues to assert that its international obligations concerning the protection of people do not apply to Chagos, thus effectively treating the Chagos Archipelago as an international law-free zone when it comes to the protection of people.
Bancoult said that while visiting Diego Garcia on a “heritage visit,” he and fellow Chagossians had seen how the graves of their relatives had been allowed to decay, in comparison to another cemetery for US military dogs, whose graves were well-maintained. He concluded that dogs get better treatment than Chagossians.
Some other members of the Chagos Refugees Group said that they have never been opposed to the existence of the US base on Diego Garcia—they want to live on the islands with it. They asked why, if foreigners are brought in to work on the base, such as from the Philippines, it is not possible for Chagossians to live on the islands.
The justifications canvassed by the UK government for the forced displacement and prevention of return of the Chagossians do not stand up to scrutiny. The UK initially hid its real motivation for forced deportation and lied that there was no permanent Chagossian population. For the last 20 years, it has claimed security and cost as justification for preventing return. But neither the UK nor the US have ever explained why it is necessary to keep the Chagossians from returning to their homes on the islands across the entire archipelago, when they permitted them in law to do so for four years between 2000 and 2004, and the Chagossian representatives have repeatedly said that they are not calling for a closure of the base on Diego Garcia (which only occupies part of one island). Neither can cost be a reason to prevent the return of a population when the UK was responsible for their displacement and owes them reparations. The UK has been responsible for a deliberate and cynical infliction of serious harm against Chagossians that spans generations.
The Right to Return
Chagossians interviewed by Human Rights Watch had different views on key issues affecting them, including which country should govern Chagos, but they expressed overwhelming support for the right to return to Chagos. These included members of different Chagossian groups in different parts of the world, notably the Chagos Refugees Group, Chagos Asylum People, Seychelles Chagossian Committee, and Chagossian Voices.
The Chagos Refugees Group in 2008 published “Returning Home: A Proposal for the Resettlement of the Chagos Islands,” which included a costed proposal for resettlement from a former director of the Overseas Development Institute, estimating this at £25 million over a period of five years.
Virtually all Chagossians born on Chagos whom Human Rights Watch interviewed said that in addition to an acknowledgment of their right to return, they actually want to return, not just for brief visits, but to live permanently on the islands. Furcy said, “I want to return to Chagos, even if I can’t work. Chagos is my land.” Marie Brigitte Ernest, who was born on Peros Banhos, said, “I want to return to my country and compensation for all the moral troubles.” Iline Talate Louis said, “my dream is always to return to my island,” where she lived for her first 10 years.
“It would be more simple, more beautiful to be at home. We are not at home [in Mauritius],” Bertin said. “When I left, I was 17, now I’m 67. We lived our life quietly … I don’t understand why they did this.” She said that recent UK offers of citizenship were not of any use to her. “Now they say they will give passports, but for the first generation of Chagossians, what is there? They are building a building without a base.” She said she wants to return to her island. “It is my land.”
Marie Jeanette Sabrie, born in Salomon in 1956, said, “Salomon is still in my heart. I want to go back there—my siblings and my five children also want to go live there. It would be enough for me to open my windows and see the sea. I am a pensioner now and would be happy to live out my retirement there.”
According to Lefade, “there is a nostalgia in our heart about when we will get back to our country. I come to Mauritius because this is where I am allowed to go, and this is where my family was forced to live. But I would love to go back to Chagos.”
Solange Hoareau, who was deported to Seychelles with her Seychellois husband in 1971, said, “I want to go back to live in Diego Garcia where I was born, even with the military base there. It is the land of my birth and I want the right to live there.”
Chagossians who worked on the coconut plantations say they do not receive pensions from the UK government, which bought out the companies, unless they live in the UK.
Some younger generations of Chagossians, born after the deportations, told Human Rights Watch they share similar views about the right to return. Jean-Francois Nellan, whose grandparents were forced to leave Chagos and who has lived in Mauritius and now the UK, said he is proud to call himself Chagossian. He said if given the right to return “I would leave everything and go back.”
Louis Elyse, whose parents were forced to leave Peros Banhos and now lives in the UK, said he would be on the first plane or ship back to Chagos if given the right to return. Leveque, whose grandparents were prevented from returning to Chagos, also said if someone told her to “pack your bags, you can return,” that she would.
Responsibility for Abuses
Primary responsibility for the abuses against the Chagossians lies with the UK, the colonial power that forced the entire population to leave the Chagos islands and has since prevented their return. Underlying this discriminatory treatment of the Chagossians has been systematic racism that manifested itself in various ways, including treating the Chagossians as a people not worthy of consideration.
From the start, the US played a key role by demanding the removal of Chagossians from Diego Garcia, for which it still denies responsibility. Since then, the US has played a significant role supporting the UK’s efforts to prevent their return, although its exact involvement over the years is murky due to the limited publication of official documents. The countries where Chagossians currently live—Mauritius, Seychelles and now the UK—have obligations to ensure they can live in dignity and without discrimination. In particular, Mauritius, in its struggle to return Chagos to its control, needs to ensure that all Chagossians, whatever their citizenship, can return.
Discrimination and Racism by UK Officials
The UK government and its officials have treated the Chagossian people over the decades with demonstrable racism, including in language in official documents, and through racial and ethnic discrimination. They have violated the basic rights of the Chagossians as a people, notably to their lands and territories, because of their race and ethnicity.
The underlying racism of UK officials toward the Chagossians was illustrated in confidential documents from the 1960s that were published in the 1990s, which contain explicitly racist language from very senior UK officials.
For instance, a UK government memorandum dated August 24, 1966, from PRH Wright, states that the permanent under-secretary, the most senior official in the ministry, had minuted that:
We must surely be very tough about this. The object of the exercise is to get some rocks which will remain ours ; there will be no indigenous population except seagulls who have not yet got a Committee (the Status of Women Committee does not cover the rights of Birds).
A handwritten note that DA Greenhill added to this says:
Unfortunately along with the Birds go some few Tarzans or Man Fridays whose origins are obscure, and who are being hopefully wished on to Mauritius etc. When this has been done I agree we must be very tough and a submission is being done accordingly.
Similar racist language may have been repeated by UK officials in 2009. A cable from the US State Department concerning a meeting between US and UK officials was published by Wikileaks and the Guardian in 2010. The cable states:
However, [the UK official] stated that, according to the HGM,s [sic] current thinking on a reserve, there would be "no human footprints" or "Man Fridays" on the BIOT's uninhabited islands. He asserted that establishing a marine park would, in effect, put paid to resettlement claims of the archipelago's former residents. Responding to Polcouns' observation that the advocates of Chagossian resettlement continue to vigorously press their case, [the UK official] opined that the UK's "environmental lobby is far more powerful than the Chagossians' advocates.”[159]
In subsequent UK court hearings, two of the UK officials named in the cable denied having used the term “Man Fridays.” However, the underlying approach to denying the basic rights of the Chagossians over many decades displays racist assumptions and discriminatory intent.
Underlying racial and ethnic discrimination is also evident in the way that successive UK governments have sought to deny the Chagossians human rights protections. In particular, they have denied that international and regional human rights treaties that the UK has ratified apply to Chagos, including the European Convention on Human Rights (and the UK’s domestic Human Rights Act), UN treaties on human rights, the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, and the 1951 Refugee Convention, although the UK claims Chagos as its territory.
The UK authorities have continued to claim, in echoes of the 1960s, that the BIOT does not have a permanent population, using this to assert that the human rights treaties are not applicable to the UK in its actions there, despite strong disagreement from UN human rights treaty bodies. The effect of this is that the UK authorities have created different standards of rights that apply in their territories, affecting different people, around the world. At the bottom in terms of protection of rights are the Chagos islands—the UK’s last colony in Africa—where the UK government considers that few if any human rights treaties apply.
The UK’s treatment of the Chagossians has long been compared to that of the inhabitants of other islands it still controls, including the Falklands—where several thousand islanders are of European descent, and the UK has strongly defended their rights. In 1985, Minority Rights Group International made the explicit comparison between the UK authorities' treatment of Chagossians and of Falkland Islanders, stating that “[i]t is difficult to escape the conclusion that the chief reason for the ‘paramount’ treatment offered to the Falkland islanders is simply that their skin is white.” In a 2019 UN General Assembly debate on Chagos, the UK representative referred to “the right of islanders to self-determination, as well as to freely determine their political status and pursue their economic and cultural development.” But she was referring only to the inhabitants of the Falklands, South Georgia, and South Sandwich Islands, not the Chagossians.
The UK’s differing treatment of European inhabitants of other islands under its control is evident with its military bases in Cyprus. After Cyprus obtained independence from the UK in 1960, the UK insisted on retaining military bases on the island, and the Cyprus independence treaty created two “Sovereign Base Areas” where the UK retained sovereignty. Unlike Chagos, however, it did not deport the inhabitants of the island to maintain the security of its bases. Nor has it denied their human rights—it has explicitly extended the application of the European Convention on Human Rights to the military base areas it controls and allows inhabitants to bring cases to the European Court of Human Rights.
Role of the United States
The United States was instrumental in the forced displacement of the Chagossians from the mid-1960s to 1973. Since then, it has backed the UK’s efforts to block the Chagossians’ return, even to the islands that the US has never used for military purposes. Currently, the US is unwilling to provide financial support for the return of Chagossians or to provide them compensation.
The US approached the UK over the possibility of acquiring Diego Garcia for a base possibly as early as 1960. The US authorities told the UK in 1964 that it wanted a base or military facility on Diego Garcia without any inhabitants on the island. In the years that followed, the US pushed for Diego Garcia to be cleared of its inhabitants. The UK eventually decided to displace the population of all the Chagos Archipelago as the US would not guarantee it would never want to use any of the other islands, and if it ever wanted such military use, it had said it would want the islands with no inhabitants.
A January 1971 memorandum from John Stevenson, legal adviser at the Department of State, to Admiral Elmor Zumwalt, chief of naval operations, says, concerning the Chagossians, that “their removal is to accommodate US needs, and the USG will, of course, be considered to share the responsibility with the UK by the inhabitants and other nations if satisfactory arrangements are not made.”
In December 1971, a cable from the US embassy in Port Louis, Mauritius about the Chagossians now living there, said “[t]he USG has a moral responsibility for the well-being of these people who were involuntarily moved at our request,” especially as the US government had resisted efforts by the Mauritius and UK governments to “permit Ilois [Chagossians] to remain [on Diego Garcia] as employees of the facility.”
In a 2006 brief to the US Supreme Court, the US Department of Justice stated that “the Executive Branch determined that critical national security considerations – including the spread of Soviet influence in the Indian Ocean region – required the US to pursue the BIOT Agreement with Britain and build a military facility in the Indian Ocean notwithstanding the potential need for relocation of the local people.”
In 1975, the US government requested that Congress authorize an expansion of the base, with President Gerald Ford stating such facilities were “essential to the national interest of the United States.”
The US Congress, in almost 50 years since the expulsion of Chagossians from their homes, has seemingly held hearings only once concerning Chagos. In 1975, the US House of Representatives Special Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on International Relations held hearings on Diego Garcia, including “on the circumstances under which the former inhabitants of Diego Garcia left or were forced from Diego Garcia” and “the role of the United States and its responsibility for what happened to these people and their poor condition today.”
In testimony at these hearings, George Vest, the director of the Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs at the State Department, said the US had no “intention to station permanently operational units” on the island, which he called “uninhabited.” Later, Sen. John Culver described this testimony about the Chagossians as “either based on ignorance or was deliberately misleading.”
Introducing the discussion concerning the Chagossians on November 4, 1975, Congressman Lee Hamilton, chair of the subcommittee, stated:
It is evident that despite whatever efforts are made to pass responsibility for these islanders to Great Britain or Mauritius, the United States has some responsibility for the removal of over 1,000 islanders from Diego Garcia and surrounding islands and that, as an accomplice in this venture, we along with Great Britain and Mauritius bear a moral obligation to help these people find some sense of their former feeling of community elsewhere.
A report provided to this committee by the US Departments of State and Defense about the Chagossians stated:
There were several reasons for desiring uninhabited islands for military use. Security was a factor considered by both governments. The United States was concerned about the social problems that could be expected when placing a military detachment on an isolated tropical island alongside a population with an informal social structure and a prevalent cash wage of less than $4.00 per month. It appears that the United Kingdom also was concerned with the problems involved in establishing civil administration for islands it was considering developing for military purposes.
Over the subsequent decades, the US authorities, regardless of which party was in power, have generally continued to oppose any return of the Chagossians to any of the islands, although they have made very few public statements. They also have, over the years, effectiv
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