Britain’s Double Standards in International Affairs
https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/02/19/britains-double-standards-in-international-affairs/
On February
12 it was announced by the UN that a British lawyer had been
elected as chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court. No
matter what one might think of the ICC, it is taking steps to investigate war
crimes in Afghanistan and Yemen, so it can’t be all bad. But a major
point in this international development is that the person involved, Karim
Khan, a brilliant advocate, was expected to be chosen by consensus but as noted by the UK’s Guardian newspaper, there was a last-minute objection by the Indian Ocean the island state of Mauritius which “focused less on Karim as an individual, but
that he was nominated by the British government. Mauritius had been infuriated
that UK ministers had for a second time said they had no need to abide by
rulings of international UN courts in the dispute over its sovereignty of the Chagos Islands in the
Indian Ocean.
This is one
example of the British government flouting international law when it considers
such codes to be awkward, and an illustration of its inconsistent and even
hypocritical approach to world developments.
***
Hong Kong
used to be a British colony and reverted to China in 1997. Since then there
have been disagreements between Britain and China concerning the governance of the
region, and the British government has poked its nose where it has no right to
dictate the conduct of affairs. It claims to have a “moral commitment” regarding a
security law applicable to Hong Kong, and in a speech about the region on
January 29 the British prime minister, the egregious Boris Johnson, declared that he and his government “stand up for freedom and autonomy.”
It so happens
that on the same day as Johnson was preaching about his love of freedom the
United Nation’s maritime court in Hamburg announced that Britain has no sovereignty over the
Chagos Islands. As the UK Guardian reported, the Court “criticized London for its failure to
hand the territory back to Mauritius and follows the international court of
justice announcement last year that the UK’s ongoing administration of the
islands were ‘unlawful’.”
Britain’s
treatment of the former inhabitants of the Chagos Islands has been disgraceful
and entirely at variance with its self-righteous criticism of other countries
for their supposed denial of human rights.
The Chagos
chain of some sixty islets is in the middle of the Indian Ocean and used to be
a paradise for the inhabitants but, as noted by the BBC, “Between 1968 and 1974, Britain forcibly removed
thousands of Chagossians from their homelands and sent them more than 1,000
miles away to Mauritius and the Seychelles, where they faced extreme poverty
and discrimination.” There are some 3,000 reluctantly resident in Britain and many of the younger ones, born
in exile, have been denied British citizenship and live in fear of being
expelled.
As I have
written in Counterpunch in the past, the Chagos Archipelago was
“depopulated” in the 1960s and 70s because Britain had agreed that there should
be a US military airfield on the main island, Diego Garcia. As revealed in 2004, the bureaucrats of Britain’s
Colonial Office had written that “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. Unfortunately along with the Birds
go some few Tarzans or Men Fridays whose origins are obscure, and who are being
hopefully wished on to Mauritius etc.”
The sneering
condescension of that racist bigotry is repulsive, but the attitude remains,
and the Chagos Islanders will continue to be victims of that mentality. By
various subterfuges, the people of the Archipelago were expelled, in the course
of which the colonial governor Sir Bruce Greatbatch “ordered all pet dogs on Diego Garcia to be killed.
Almost 1,000 pets were rounded up and gassed, using the exhaust fumes from American
military vehicles.” As one evicted Islander, Lizette Tallatte said in 2004
documentary, “when their
dogs were taken away in front of them, our children screamed and cried,” and
then the remaining islanders “were loaded onto ships, allowed to take only one
suitcase. They left behind their homes and furniture, and their lives.”
The islands
had been a French colony and were handed over to Britain in 1814 by the Treaty
of Paris which officially ended the Napoleonic Wars. They formed part of the
colony of Mauritius, the much larger island group some 2000 kilometers to the
southeast.
Then,
as Law World records, “In 1965, the UK and Mauritius signed the
Lancaster House Agreement, whereby the Chagos Islands were detached from Mauritius
and included in a new territory called the British Indian Ocean
Territory. Mauritius later alleged that this detachment was forced,
especially due to its vulnerable position as a former British colony. Due to
the geographically strategic position of Chagos – equally situated between
Indonesia, Australia, Iraq, and eastern Africa – the UK and the United States
had long been considering it for the installation of a military base. In
1966, the UK and the US signed a deal for the implementation of such a base on
the island of Diego Garcia for an indefinite period . . .”
So the
“Tarzans and Man Fridays”, as the inhabitants were regarded by the bigoted
smirking Brits, were sacrificed on Washington’s altar of domination which added
another military base to the 800 around the globe. In 2016, the lease for the base was extended until 2036. No mention was made of the islanders who had been
forcibly evicted from their homes.
On 22 May
2019, the UN General Assembly voted 116 to 6 in favor of a resolution demanding that the United Kingdom
withdraw “its colonial administration unconditionally from the Chagos
Archipelago” within six months. Only the U.S., Hungary, Israel, Australia and
the Maldives backed the UK, but although the result was indicative of the world
opinion and deeply condemnatory of the US and Britain the resolution is
non-binding and will be ignored by those most directly involved — and the
islanders will stay poverty-ridden in exile. They are, after all, mere “Tarzans
and Man Fridays” and it is no doubt hoped that soon they will all die off and
cease to be a problem.
The people
who deny the Islanders their human rights are poisonous filth, as made clear in
a British 2009 diplomatic cable revealed by Wikileaks (no wonder the Brit establishment detests
Julian Assange and is treating him so disgustingly) which stated that the
government “would like to establish a ‘marine park’ or ‘reserve’ providing
comprehensive environmental protection to the reefs and waters of the British
Indian Ocean Territory [BIOT] . . . [which] would in no way impinge on
US use of the BIOT, including Diego Garcia, for military purposes . . . [and
ensure] that former inhabitants would find it difficult, if not impossible, to
pursue their claim for resettlement on the islands if the entire Chagos
Archipelago was a marine reserve.”
The
inhabitants of Hong Kong, on the other hand, are more highly regarded in
London, and on January 29 the British government announced satisfaction about “the UK’s
historic and moral commitment to the people of Hong Kong who have had their
rights and freedoms restricted.” The UK has, after all, declared it wishes to “defend human rights across
the globe.”
In November
2016 the Financial Times reported extension of the lease for the US base on
Diego Garcia for another twenty years and noted that “the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office said that the Chagossians would not be allowed to return
“on the grounds of feasibility, defense and security interests, and cost to the
British taxpayer”. It was also announced that the evicted Islanders would
receive 40 million pounds in compensation.
But on
January 31 it was revealed that less than £12,000 of that forty million has been directed to helping the exiled
islanders and their families. Henry Smith, the UK Member of Parliament in
whose constituency many Chagossians now exist, stated bluntly that “it’s outrageous that next to
none of this funding has actually been utilized . . . [it is] another failure
of Foreign Office promises over half a century to the Chagossian community.”
The “defense
of human rights” by the government of Boris Johnson is a charade, and the
treatment of the Chagos Islanders is indefensibly cruel and loathsome. But the
government and their little helpers in London think it’s such an unimportant
matter that it will simply fade away. Like the islanders.
Alas, they
are probably right. And we will see yet another victory for duplicity
over morality, illustrating Britain’s double standards in international
affairs.
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