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UN's top court to hear case on fate of Chagos isles

The Hague, Netherlands | August 3, 2018, Friday @ 13:15 in World » INDIAN OCEAN | By: AFP | Views: 3642
UN's top court to hear case on fate of Chagos isles

Chagos Islanders leave London's Houses of Parliament on October 22, 2008. The British government on Wednesday won its appeal to Britain's highest court over previous rulings that allowed displaced Indian Ocean islanders to return home. The three-to-two majority decision by the House of Lords overturns rulings that said the use of the royal prerogative -- the legislative method used to block the return of the Chagos islanders -- was unlawful. It means that a bar on the islanders returning home has been upheld. (AFP PHOTO/Shaun Curry)

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(AFP) - The world court said it will hold hearings in September in a case brought by the United Nations asking judges to examine the fate of the British-ruled Chagos Islands, home to a military base.

The Indian Ocean archipelago has been at the centre of a decades-long dispute over Britain's decision to separate it from Mauritius in 1965 and set up a major joint military base with the US on Diego Garcia, the largest of the islands.

In a diplomatic blow to Britain, the UN General Assembly last June adopted a resolution presented by Mauritius and backed by African countries asking the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to offer an opinion on the island chain's fate.

The ICJ will "hold public hearings on the request for advisory opinion" in the case of the "legal consequences of the separation of the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965 from Monday 3 to Thursday 6 September 2018," the tribunal said in a statement.

The African Union and a remarkable number of 22 other countries -- including Britain, Germany and several Asian and Latin American nations -- "have expressed their intention of participating in the oral proceedings", the court added.

Based in The Hague, the court was set up by the United Nations in 1946 to rule in disputes between nations.

The vote at the UN was seen as a test of Britain's ability to rally support at the United Nations from fellow Europeans after it voted to leave the European Union.

But the move towards the ICJ was approved by a vote of 94-15 with 65 abstentions, notably from many European countries including Germany, France, Italy and Spain.

The strategic base of Diego Garcia, which has been leased until 2036, was thrust into the spotlight after it became known that it had been used for CIA interrogations of suspects captured in Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York.

Following the four days of hearings, the ICJ will give an advisory opinion at a later date on the British decision to separate the Chagos islands from Mauritius and expel some 1,500 residents in order to set up the base.

Unlike most ICJ rulings, it will be non-binding but it would lend support to a campaign by Mauritius for the return of the Chagos Islands.

Mauritius argues that it was illegal for Britain to break up its territory while the Indian Ocean country was under British colonial rule. Mauritius won independence in 1968.

Britain rejects Mauritius's sovereignty claim over the Chagos Islands but has said it will return the archipelago to Mauritius when the military base is no longer needed, without specifying a possible date.

© Agence France-Presse

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Tags: UN, diplomacy, Mauritius, Britain, Chagos, court

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