Monday 21 May 2012

PAN African Parliament speech of Olivier Bancoult

Speech of Olivier Bancoult, OSK in PAN African Parliament.

During the Global African Diaspora Parliamentarians Summit (GADPS) from 22nd and 23rd May 2012, in Midrand, Republic of South Africa.


Imagine, one day you were all informed that your home is actually no longer your home and you must immediately leave. You are given no explanation, you have received no prior warnings but you are now warned that at the slightest protest and the moment that you refused to abide by this new order you would be starved to death.  Every single family in your village is being forcibly removed from their home. Dogs are shot, gassed or simply burnt alive and you will suffer the same fate if you do not leave.

I need not ask how you would feel.

Honourable Members, this is the story of the Chagossians. This is the story of my brothers and sisters from the Chagos Archipelago. Indeed, the Chagossians were deported from our home land and the eviction of that entire nation lasted from 1967 to 1973. They forcibly boarded on ships to Seychelles and Mauritius.  The trip was appalling and in effect amounted to inhuman and degrading treatment. Not only have they lost their homes but they were treated worse than animals.

My story? I was 4 years old when I left the Island with my parents and sister.  We were going to Mauritius because my sister had to undergo medical treatment. Sadly, she passed away and when my mother went to make the necessary arrangement for us to go back home, she was told that we were not allowed to return. How would you feel if you were told that you would never be able to go back home again? How would you feel if you were informed that you could not go back even to simply collect your belongings? My life changed, dramatically, overnight!

In 1968, approximately 2500 Chagossian were evicted from the Chagos Archipelago. 

Presently we have less than 800 Chagossians.

In 2010, 3 natives passed away.

In 2012, Mrs Talatte, a well known Chagossian lady who was shortlisted among 1000 women eligible for the Nobel Prize, a fighter to the core, passed away.  Sadly, after years of struggle, she could not be buried in her homeland.

Today, the number of natives has reduced significantly.

Even those who are alive do not know the real significance of freedom.

We, the Chagossians, ladies and gentlemen, are proud of our roots, culture, values and legacy. Many of us are natives of the British Indian Ocean Territory and therefore we are entitled to a fundamental right of abode in Chagos now known as the British Indian Ocean Territory. Nobody can tamper with this indisputable fact, irrespective how hard they try. 

The quasi refusal of the British Government to respect our fundamental human rights must be condemned by the whole international community. The deportation of an entire population constitutes a crime against humanity that Africa cannot and should not condone.

Honourable Members, it must be highlighted that the United Kingdom scrupulously planned this atrocious and despicable crime. The UK was fully aware of the fact that the deportation would be against the principles of international law. The whole operation was shielded from the purview of the United Nations.

30 years later, declassified documents revealed the extent of the sheer manipulation of facts avoid the fury of the international community.

Indeed, throughout internal discussions about resettlement options for the Chagossians, memoranda from this period show that the U.K. Government was fully aware that it proposed to expel native islanders from their homeland, and insofar as they considered the legal rights of the islanders, showed determination to override such legal rights.  In 1965, the Queen enacted the BIOT Order, empowering the Commissioner to ‘make laws for the peace, order and good governance of the territory’. 

Let me read you a memorandum that was sent by a British official:
  
“[The Colonial Office wishes] to avoid using the phrase ‘permanent inhabitants’ in relation to any of the islands in the territory because to recognize that there are permanent inhabitants will imply that there is a population whose democratic rights will have to be safeguarded and which will therefore be deemed by the UN Committee of Twenty four to come within its purview… it may be necessary to issue [the inhabitants] with documents making it clear that they are ‘belongers’ of Mauritius or the Seychelles and only temporarily resident in the BIOT. This device, though rather transparent, would at least give us a defensible position to take up in the Committee of Twentyfour… It would be highly embarrassing to us if, after giving the Americans to understand that the islands in the BIOT would be available to them for defence purposes, we then had to tell them that we proposed to admit that they fell within the purview of the Committee of Twenty four.

One UK official even admitted that he is ‘not sure...about the validity of the argument that the Ilois have lived in Chagos ‘only on sufferance of the owners,’ since the point at issue is ‘belonging’ in a national sense rather than rights of residence on private property.”

These are concrete proofs that self proclaimed advocates of human rights such as the United States and the United Kingdom knew that they were about to conduct an illegal operation.  They must provide redress to the Chagossian Community. We must be allowed to return and resettle in our homeland and we know we will be successful in our struggle if the whole of Africa stands united and supports us in our cause.

In August 1998, I brought an action in London, challenging the validity of the BIOT Immigration Ordinance of 1971.

On 3 November 2000, the Divisional Court in its judgment concluded that the Order was illegal   because the power to make legislation for "peace, order and good government” did not allow   legislation to exclude the population from the territory. It issued a declaration that the Ordinance was invalid.
On 3 November 2000, the Foreign Secretary announced that they were examining the feasibility of resettlement of the Chagossians and that they would issue a new immigration ordinance which would allow us to return to the outer islands.

On 3 November 2000, the BIOT Immigration Ordinance 2000 issued, allowing our return to Peros Banhos and Salomon, while stipulating that Diego Garcia could only be accessed by those holding a permit. We were excluded from obtaining such permits.

People often say that we did not go back to resettle when we were allowed to and thus use this fact against us to supposedly show that we are not genuine.  Yet my question is how could we have gone back absent any assistance for resettlement?

Despite the strong statement by the Foreign Secretary on the 3rd of November 2000, on 10th June 2004 the U.K. Government passed into law the British Indian Ocean Territory (Constitution) Order 2004 and the BIOT (Immigration) Order 2004.  These are Orders in Council under the Crown’s prerogative powers and have not been subject to Parliamentary scrutiny.  Therefore, by declaring that no person has the right of abode in the territory, or the right to enter it except as authorized, these Orders purport to abrogate existing rights to live in the territory which the Chagossians possess.
In addition, in June 2004, the Government issued a statement announcing the abandonment of the Feasibility Studies which had provided a favourable report on the feasibility of returning the population but included some general comments about the possibility of difficulties for a resettled population which had not been based on any scientific study.  No attempt had been made to identify costs and benefits of resettlement, and no attempt had been made to identify partnership funding from public or private source.
In 2006, the UK Court held the Orders to be irrational.
In the Court of Appeal the Orders were unanimously held to be a breach of a legitimate expectation created by the Foreign Secretary, held them to be an abuse of power.
We have also petitioned the European Court of Human Rights on the basis that our treatment from 1965 to date by the Government of the United Kingdom constitutes violations of articles of the European Convention on Human Rights and cumulatively amount to inhuman and degrading treatment.

The stance adopted by the US Courts was that “all the claims in this case present non-justiciable political questions” and that the political question doctrine precluded the Court from exercising subject matter jurisdiction. It is basically a matter for the executive.  In 2008, the UK House of Lords basically held that this was a matter of foreign policy and the judiciary should not interfere.

On the 21st February 2008, U.K. Foreign Secretary David Miliband, admitted before the House of Commons, the use of Diego Garcia by U.S. planes on extraordinary rendition flights.

On the 1st April 2010, U.K. Foreign Secretary announced the creation of a Marine Protected Area in the British Indian Ocean Territory.  This will include a “no-take” marine reserve where commercial fishing will be banned.  Leaked diplomatic cables later revealed that the purpose of that action was to render it even more difficult for the Islanders to return to their islands.
In August 2011, application for judicial review was filed and on the 9th of March 2012, leave was granted.
Honourable Members, the above is a faithful summary of our litigation efforts. However, today, I make an urgent request to all members and officials present. The Chagossians urge you to support their cause. We have only one small request and that is to simply respect our fundamental human rights.
We believe in our fundamental human rights and we have faith in Africa. Today, the time is riper than ever for Africa to show that it will no longer stay silent when its own people are being denied their rights. The Chagossians make an appeal to Africa to stay united and to denounce this injustice vociferously. Resolutions can be adopted both at the regional and at the international levels. Hopefully Africa will make us Chagossians proud and ensure that the plight of the Chagossians is addressed on every forum. We are of African descents and we hope that the whole African continent will be bold enough to sanction the UK and the US for the treatment inflicted upon the Chagossians.
The UK Prime Minister recently stated that the ‘Britain remains staunchly committed to upholding the right of the Falkland Islanders, and of the Falkland Islanders alone, to determine their own future. That was the fundamental principle that was at stake 30 years ago: and that is the principle which we solemnly reaffirm today’.  How ironical! When a whole population was being wiped out from the Chagos Archipelago, in the 1960s, the UK did not even once find it important to inform and secure our consent? Again, in 2010, when the Chagos Archipelgo was declared a Marine Protected Area, the principle of free prior, informed consent was not abided by. The UK should crease applying an ‘a la carte’ policy according to its whims and fancies.
Honourable Members, so long that Africa shies away from its duty to protect its brothers and sisters, other countries, will continue to shamelessly trample our rights. The Wiki leaks revealed that in 1966, the Chagossians were described as “few Tarzans and Man Fridays”! The use of such racist terms in 1966, when decolonization was at its peak, indicates a sham!
The Universal Declaration on Human Rights was drafted in 1949 and 17 years later the Chagossians are being described in such derogatory terms. In 2010, 51 years later after the Universal Declaration on Human Rights was adopted, again the UK, without the slightest consideration to our rights, our hopes and last but not the least to our dignity, declared the Islands a Marine Protected Area! Once more, leaked diplomatic cables revealed that this initiative was taken solely to prevent us from returning to our home.
I am but a humble man who has been given the opportunity to address you honourable gentlemen and yet, here we all are, united by the spirit of brotherhood, determined to forestall human rights violations. Africa should proudly and fearlessly stand up for its people. Other countries may self proclaimed themselves as the pioneers of human rights but every single person of African descent knows that we are the real advocates of human rights. The Banjul Charter on Human Rights that came into force on the 21st of October 1986, is proof of our commitment but more importantly of our resilience despite of decades of oppressions. We have the opportunity to teach self proclaimed pioneers of human rights how far and to what extent they should put into practice what they preach! Let us not be afraid!
We the Chagossians are fearless, committed and we will not give up our struggle until we have reached our goal. We are unstoppable. I sincerely and genuinely believe that we have inherited this ‘fighters’ spirits’ from our African legacy!  I make an appeal to each and every person present today, to stand up to our cause.
A crime of humanity perpetrated against a group of people of African descents is a crime committed against the whole of Africa and as Martin Luther King said, ‘Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. ’Let us show that our African garment of destiny is strong, united and unbreakable and hands in hands, the cause of the Chagossians will triumph!
Let my fight be your cause, my hope be your inspiration, my trust be your motivation and my faith be your determination.
Honourable members, thank you for your kind attention.
Olivier Bancoult, OSK in PAN African Parliament.

21st of May 2012