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British control of Chagos Islands is ‘keeping the world safe’, claims UK foreign office minister

  • Comment was response to UN’s top court calling on London to leave the Indian Ocean archipelago as soon as possible so its people can return home

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File photo of Turtle Cove on Diego Garcia, the largest island in the Chagos Archipelago and site of a major US military base. Photo: Reuters

Britain will consider the view of the World Court on control of the Chagos Islands but the dispute is with Mauritius and should be resolved bilaterally, British foreign office minister Alan Duncan insisted on Tuesday.

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On Monday the International Court of Justice (ICJ) told Britain to give up control over the Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean and said it had wrongfully forced the population to leave in the 1970s to make way for a US airbase.

The US military base on Diego Garcia in October 2001. Photo: Reuters
The US military base on Diego Garcia in October 2001. Photo: Reuters

The UN General Assembly asked the court to advise on whether the process of decolonisation had been concluded lawfully.

“We will of course consider the detail of the opinion carefully but this is a bilateral dispute and for the General Assembly to seek an advisory opinion by the ICJ was therefore a misuse of powers which sets a dangerous precedent for other bilateral disputes,” Duncan told parliament.

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“The defence facilities on the British Indian Ocean Territory help to keep people here in Britain and the world safe and we will continue to seek a bilateral solution to what is a bilateral dispute with Mauritius.”

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