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The
following article was published in The National Post - a highly respected
Canadian national newspaper. We fully acknowledge the
work of The National Post, and the wrtier, Corinna Schuler.
We
feel the story provides an excellent background to the plight of the Chagossians
and would like to thank The National Post for publishing it. We look forward to the follow up when the
Chagossian people have been returned
to their homeland.
'It
Just Takes One Man'
by
Corinna Schuler
from
Canada's National
Post
Wednesday
3 January, 2001
Growing
up in a slum on the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius, Louis Olivier Bancoult
listened to his mother's stories about the idyllic colony their people had been
forced to abandon in the late '60s. Last year, Bancoult took Britain to court,
uncovering a secret deal that turned their homeland over to the United States
PORT
LOUIS, Mauritius - Louis Olivier Bancoult is a labourer who grew up with eight
siblings in a tin-shack slum in Mauritius, unsophisticated and unknown. But last
month, he took on a superpower -- and won.
His
historic victory in a British High Court not only landed him on the front pages
of London newspapers, it laid bare a pack of government lies, bribes and secret
deals that leaves even cynical conspiracy buffs agog.
Louis
Olivier Bancoult leaves the British High Court in London in November after
winning his battle on behalf of the Ilois, the inhabitants of the Chagos Islands
who were forced to leave some 30 years ago to make way for a U.S. military base.
(Associated Press)
Mr.
Bancoult is a hero among hundreds of forgotten people who have spent the past 30
years here living in poverty, exiles from a land they call "paradise."
Many
never understood why they were banished from their homes on the pristine Chagos
Islands, tiny specks in the middle of the Indian Ocean. They were dumped on the
docks of Mauritius, almost 2,000 kilometres away, without food, shelter, work or
official explanation.
But
Mr. Bancoult proved his community was a victim of Cold War politics, cleared out
in a secret deal that made way for a U.S. air base, used most recently to fly
B-52 bombers to the Gulf War.
"Finally,
the whole world knows the truth," says Mr. Bancoult's 75-year-old mother,
Rita Isou, sitting outside the sweltering one-room shack she shares with
children and grandchildren. Tears well in her eyes as she cuddles a chubby
toddler.
"Now
we can go home," she tells her grandson, "back to our
motherland."
The
motherland is on the Chagos Islands, a little-known archipelago that appears as
a smudge of dots on most world maps. The islands had been occupied by the Ilois
people, descendants of African slaves and Indian plantation workers, for more
than 200 years.
Mr.
Bancoult was just four years old when he left, but his mother remembers well the
life they had.
"There
was no need for money," she recalls. "Almost everything came from
nature, the sea, the plants. We ate fish and crabs and lobsters ... At night, we
made fires on the beach and danced and drank our local wines."
It
was a simple life, but not entirely primitive. Along with Mauritius, the Chagos
Islands formed one of Britain's last colonial outposts. Boats delivered
essentials such as milk and rice. There were coconut plantations, a doctor, a
church and a school for the children. The Bancoult family lived in a small
beach-side shelter, raising pigs and chickens and growing vegetables.
"I
remember a good, happy life," says Mrs. Isou.
But
the Ilois were unlucky enough to live in an area of strategic importance, near
Africa, the Middle East and Southwest Asia.
At
the height of the Cold War, the eyes of the great powers fell on the island
paradise. The United States, fighting in Vietnam and jittery about the Soviet
empire, desperately wanted a military base in the Indian Ocean. The first choice
was the island of Aldabra, but it was a breeding ground for rare tortoises, an
animal whose cause would certainly be championed by noisy environmentalists.
The
second choice was Diego Garcia, the largest island in the Chagos group and home
to hundreds of Ilois, a people whose cause was championed by no one.
So
the United States and Britain cut a secret deal. The Americans would get a
five-year lease on Diego Garcia and, in return, cash-strapped Britain would
receive a multi-million-dollar discount on the Polaris nuclear submarines it was
buying.
The
two countries conspired to keep the U.S. Congress, the British Parliament and
the United Nations in the dark about the deal.
But
it was Britain alone that decided to clear the islands of their inhabitants in a
policy of "complete sterilization."
The
lies are laid out in hundreds of pages of memos and letters tabled in the
British court, almost all of them marked "secret."
"There
will be no indigenous population except seagulls," said one memo circulated
within the British Foreign Office.
"Unfortunately,
along with the birds go some few Tarzans or Man Fridays whose origins are
obscure," British diplomat Dennis Greenhill wrote in a 1966 letter that
reflects typical racist disregard for the Ilois.
"We
would not wish it to become general knowledge that some of the inhabitants have
lived on Diego Garcia for at least two generations and could, therefore, be
regarded as 'belongers,' " said another memo.
The
problem for the British was that United Nations' conventions prohibit the
removal of such settled populations. So British diplomats and parliamentarians
simply denied the existence of the Ilois people. The islanders were arbitrarily
classified as temporary "contract workers" and other transients, with
no democratic rights.
Privately,
British insiders conceded they were telling -- in the words of one diplomat -- a
"whopping fib." Memos that dealt with the cover-up were even subtitled
"maintaining the fiction."
At
first, people were tricked and cajoled into leaving. The delivery boats loaded
with rice, flour, sugar and oil simply stopped coming. Residents were offered
free boat trips to Mauritius, then refused passage home.
The
unsuspecting Bancoult family came to Mauritius in 1968 in a quest to find a
hospital for one of their nine children, who had been badly injured in an
accident. The baby girl died. But when they returned to the port to take a boat
back, they were turned away.
"The
officials told me, 'The island has been sold,' " recalls Mrs. Isou. "I
couldn't understand. I began crying, right there in the office ... After that, I
went to the harbour and watched boats coming in with our people. Everyone was
just crying.
"We
had left all our belongings behind ... We could not go visit the graves of our
grandparents. I became sick from the grief."
Three
years later, the British passed an immigration ordinance forbidding the Ilois
from ever returning to their home.
Two
years later, those who remained on the islands were simply shipped away.
Louis
Raphael, a foreman at the coconut plantation, was one of the last to leave Diego
Garcia.
"The
island administrator called a meeting and said, 'You must go.' I had to get on a
boat, with many other people," recalls Mr. Raphael, 70.
The
British officers put their horses below deck for the week-long journey, but the
Ilois were left outside, in burning sun and pouring rains.
"We
were told there would be houses, compensation, a new life for us in
Mauritius," says Mr. Raphael, staring out at the sea as he tells his story
one recent afternoon.
"But
when we got here, there was nothing."
In
all, about 3,000 people were removed.
"They
might as well have been abandoned on the streets of New York," says Robin
Mardemootoo, a young Mauritian lawyer who helped take the case to Britain.
"They
did not understand the money economy. They hadn't seen cars and roads and big
buildings. They did not have the skills to get jobs. They were just
forgotten."
Britain
paid Mauritius £3-million to take the Ilois off its hands, but what little
compensation the victims eventually received in the 1980s did not ease a life of
hardship.
Many
landed in the ramshackle quarters of Point-aux-Sable and Cassis, just minutes
away from the gleaming shops and high-rise towers of Port Louis.
Today,
blue waters lap on the beach just down the gravel road. The jobless sit under
the shade of citrus trees, drinking beer, chatting in Creole or listening to
music. The corrugated-iron shacks spill over with children, and clothes hang
from a string, flapping colourfully in the humid breeze.
Mrs.
Isou's tin house shows signs of pride. The walls are painted blue. A little
walkway is swept and in the neatly tended garden are rows of vibrant flowers.
But
the old lady cries as she talks of the country she left behind and the misery
that awaited her family here.
She
found work as a domestic servant.
"I
raised my children on food that the madam gave me to feed the animals," she
says. "They went to school without bread, or sandals or books. My husband
died on a day when we could not feed the children. I think he died of a broken
heart."
The
Ilois were ravaged by other ills they had never known before. Mrs. Isou lost
three grown sons -- one overdosed on drugs, another drank himself to death, the
third died of disease. Many girls in the community turned to prostitution.
But
young Louis was strong. He listened when his mother told stories about their
homeland, and he grew up to be a man filled with anger and determination.
Mr.
Bancoult eventually took charge of a refugee group formed by the people of
Chagos Islands, organizing hunger strikes and holding protests. But their case
did not reach court until Mr. Mardemootoo questioned why the British immigration
ordinance that banned the Ilois from their home had never been challenged in a
court of law.
Soon,
British legal aid was onside, along with Sir Sydney Kentridge, the famous lawyer
who had once acted for Nelson Mandela in South Africa. More than a dozen
research assistants spent hundreds of hours digging up documents, and the court
battle eventually came to a head this summer with hearings in the Court of
Appeal.
On
Nov. 3, Lord Justice Sir John Laws ruled "the wholesale removal of a people
from the land where they belong" was reprehensible and illegal.
Mr.
Bancoult walked out of court with hands raised above his head, making a V-sign
with his fingers.
Victory
was sweet.
This
is an "unforgettable moment," he told reporters on the steps outside
the law courts.
"People
who were unlawfully uprooted will be able to return freely and live in their
homeland."
The
Ilois have said they will not interfere with the U.S. base on Diego Garcia, and
will be happy to live on the uninhabited part of the island.
It
could take years to settle on the details, but Mrs. Isou has spent the past
month dreaming of the day she steps on the powder-soft sand she left more than
30 years ago.
"People
did not believe that my son could fight the British, but he did," she said
recently.
"I
always told him, 'It just takes one man to be brave.' "
©
2000 National Post Online
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