Mauritius asks for review of Chagos Islands deal with UK

Image source, AFP

Image caption, Navin Ramgoolam has been voicing reservations about the deal since before he took office
  • Author, Wedaeli Chibelushi
  • Role, 大象传媒 News

Mauritius' new prime minister said he has asked for an independent review of a deal with the United Kingdom over the future of the Chagos Islands.

Under the agreement, which has still to be signed, the UK would relinquish sovereignty over the archipelago but maintain a 99-year lease over Diego Garcia, home to a major UK-US military airbase.

A spokesperson for UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Thursday that Navin Ramgoolam had "indicated he was open" to the historic deal.

Ramgoolam, who was elected prime minister of Mauritius two weeks ago, told the Mauritian parliament he had asked for a review and that the findings will be considered by the cabinet.

When the deal was signed, after years of talks, Sir Keir and his then-Mauritian counterpart Pravind Jugnauth called it a "seminal moment in our relationship and a demonstration of our enduring commitment to the peaceful resolution of disputes and the rule of law".

But in his election campaign, Ramgoolam and his allies in the Change coalition described the agreement as a "sell-out" motivated by desperation ahead of the vote.

Arvin Boolell, the newly appointed minister of agro-industry and fisheries, had been more specific about the objections in his comments on Monday.

He criticised the former prime minister for granting the UK a long lease over Diego Garcia - he said it was 200 years, though the publicised timeframe was an initial period of 99 years.

The Change coalition are not the only ones with reservations about the deal - Marco Rubio, US President-elect Donald Trump鈥檚 pick for secretary of state, said in October that the deal posed a "serious threat" to US national security by giving the islands to a country allied with China.

Some groups representing the interests of Chagossians have also expressed disquiet, saying they were excluded from the negotiations.

The British prime minister and his Foreign Secretary, David Lammy, have defended the agreement as a "good deal".

"I'm very, very confident that this is a deal that the Mauritians will see, in a cross-party sense, as a good deal for them," Lammy said on Thursday.

The deal is still subject to the finalisation of a treaty.

Details of the treaty's legal text are being worked out and it is expected to go before the UK Parliament for scrutiny next year.

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Image source, Getty Images/大象传媒

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