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----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, December 21, 2001 5:23 PM
Subject: [C-I] A PEOPLE WHO REFUSE TO GIVE UP from the Oread Daily

A PEOPLE WHO REFUSE TO GIVE UP

The indigenous people of Diego Garcia and the Chagos Islands filed
suit yesterday in US District Court charging the United States with
genocide, torture and forced relocation.  More than 1000 people who
lived on the islands are listed as plaintiffs and are asking for
millions of dollars in damages. The United States uses the island --
more than 1,000 miles from India, Mauritius, Australia and the Gulf
States -- as a communications post and refueling station. The US
acquired the chain from the British in 1965 and promptly finished
ousting its inhabitants. The Chagossians charge that the agreement
with the British says "acquisition of Diego Garcia for defense
purposes will imply displacement of the whole of the existing
population of the island." The Chagossians say U.S. military and
contract workers forced them from the island in the late '60s and
early '70s. The last movement of people was accomplished by herding
them onto boats loaded with horses and other animals for a six-day
voyage to Mauritius.

Back in the 60s the US was obsessing about Soviet expansion in to the
Indian Ocean and was looking for a base in the area "without a
population problem."  The US offered the Brits an $11 million
discount on the purchase of the US-made Polaris nuclear submarines as
an incentive to come up with something for them. A memo from then
Foreign Secretary Michael  Stewart to Labor Prime Minister Harold
Wilson in 1969 admitted that the payment was kept secret from
Parliament and the US Congress.  The first island choice fell through
because the island involved was the home of rare tortoises with
friends in ecology movement.  The Chagossians had no such friends. 
The Chagos Islands were a part of the Mauritius, a British territory
campaigning for independence.  The Chagos Islands were home to some
1,800 people - mainly descendants of slaves - but no tortoises. 
Independence was granted to Mauritius, but only after the Chagos
Islands were separated in November 1965 by an Order in Council and
renamed the British Indian Ocean Territory, or BIOT. At this point,
British politicians, diplomats and civil servants began a campaign -
in their own words - "to maintain the pretense there were no
permanent inhabitants" on the islands. To the outside world, there
must be no inhabitants, merely people living there temporarily -
migrant workers and other transients.  And by the time the British
and Americans were through there were none. Residents who left the
island for any reason were prevented from returning. The remaining
inhabitants eventually were evicted to Mauritius and the Seychelles,
where they failed to adjust to city life. Most remained on the
fringes of society, poor and uneducated.

Last year a British judge ruled that the islanders could go
home. "For us, it is a historical day to win this fight. It seems
like David and Goliath," said Olivier Bancoult, chairman of the
Chagos Refugee Group in Mauritius, who was exiled in 1968 at the age
of 4. "We all think about returning, and we want compensation for all
we have been suffering."  Although at the time the US said the matter
was between Britain and the Islanders, the U.S. government filed a
statement during the hearing opposing the islanders' return to the
archipelago on the grounds that it would be a "threat to national
security," despite a distance of more than 130 miles between the air
base and the nearest island.

The people of Chagos Island have waged a long fight to regain their
dignity, their land, and their human rights.  That fight continues.
Sources: Washington Post, BBC, Guardian, World Socialist Web

The Oread Daily provides daily (Monday-Friday) progressive, left,
anti-racist, anarchist, commie, activist, environmental, Marxist,
revolutionary, etc. news and information from around the US and
around the world. The Oread Daily was a mimeographed sheet that came
out first in the summer of 1970 in Lawrence, Kansas. It was
irreverent, radical, spicy, revolutionary et. al. Now, three decades
later it returns. To view the entire Oread Daily, please visit:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OreadDaily


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