Category Archives: History

UK Marine Park May Block Diego Garcia Resettlement

Wikileaks has now resurfaced a debate over the fate of the indigenous Chagos population. It suggests the UK intended to use a marine park as a measure to prevent the resettlement of these islanders. Mauritius has now sued the UK:

A US cable from May 2009 quotes a discussion about the park with Foreign Office official Colin Roberts. “He asserted that establishing a marine park would, in effect, put paid to resettlement claims of the archipelago’s former residents,” the cable said. The Mauritian Prime Minister Navinchandra Ramgoolam said his government had filed a case before the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in Hamburg.

It is no surprise that the UK is politically opposed to resettlement claims. This is long-standing and bitter fight that has had some high-profile court cases already. Mauritius has even started to make a more aggressive sovereignty claim over Chagos, ironically. What is notable about the Wikileaks documents is how they frame the marine park and discuss ending resettlement claims a year after those claims already were struck down.

In 2008 I quoted a news article that said the UK courts ruled against allowing Chagos Islanders the right to resettle their home land. The reason given then was international security (e.g. an air base for strikes against Iraq, Iran; laundering controversial military equipment shipments to embargoed countries).

By a ruling of 3-2, the lords backed a government appeal that argued that allowing the islanders to return could have a detrimental effect on defence and international security.

The Chagos islanders were forced to leave in the first place because they lived on an island known as Diego Garcia, which I explained in 2007 had been appropriated by the US and UK when the West lost its political influence in Ethiopia.

A surveillance base and listening-post located in the highlands of the Horn of Africa, to “monitor” Soviet influence in the Middle East, was transitioned in a hurry to the small island in the Indian Ocean. The island was cleared so it could be a military installation and supply port. The risk of interference from indigenous residents was resolved by forcibly removing them and any claims to their property.

Diego Garcia was not just a lone desolate spot in the sea that the US developed to protect the free world from the Red threat, as most reports used to say. It really was a place thousands of people called home before American soldiers landed and stripped them of their property, identity and livelihood.

A year earlier, in 2007, I referenced a film called Stealing a Nation and an article in The Guardian called Paradise cleansed. Both give a detailed look at the UK foreign policy attitude towards the Chagos population and their claims.

To get rid of the [Diego Garcia] population, the Foreign Office invented the fiction that the islanders were merely transient contract workers who could be “returned” to Mauritius, 1,000 miles away. In fact, many islanders traced their ancestry back five generations, as their cemeteries bore witness. The aim, wrote a Foreign Office official in January 1966, “is to convert all the existing residents…into short-term, temporary residents.”

What the files also reveal is an imperious attitude of brutality. In August 1966, Sir Paul Gore-Booth, permanent under-secretary at the Foreign Office, wrote: “We must surely be very tough about this. The object of the exercise was to get some rocks that will remain ours. There will be no indigenous population except seagulls.” At the end of this is a handwritten note by DH Greenhill, later Baron Greenhill: “Along with the Birds go some Tarzans or Men Fridays…” Under the heading, “Maintaining the fiction”, another official urges his colleagues to reclassify the islanders as “a floating population and to “make up the rules as we go along”.

They certainly have a way with words.

Thus the recent news, spurred by Wikileaks, is a new tactic for this same old fight. A marine park is clearly an easier pitch to the international community than claims of UK defense and international security. But I do not see why the park must be mutually exclusive to resettlement of the indigenous population. The whole idea of a park should use concepts of security to allow coexistence. Risks are reduced through study in order to prevent long-term negative impact. An area is set aside to ensure that the native species are not harmed or lost while new and old visitors are allowed to live there too.

“We are interested in the preservation of our homeland and we are backing the British Government on this,” said Allen Vincatassin, chairman of the Crawley-based Diego Garcian Society, the main islanders’ group in the UK. “We support the MPA and we believe the issue is separate from resettlement.”

The question then becomes whether the UK can accept a marine park operated for interests other than just their foreign office and military.

Republicans abandon 9/11 first responders

Al Jazeera scoops America’s news networks on the latest 9/11 story and Republicans abandon first responders, as explained by John Stewart:

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The Republican position can be found summarized in a NY Daily News story about Senator Susan Collins (Republican from Maine), who called Capitol security for protection when first responders told her they would visit to lobby for the bill. That is a strange story on its own, but here is the Republican position in brief:

Republicans oppose the bill’s plan to raise funds by closing tax loopholes on foreign companies that funnel profits through third parties.

That point of opposition makes little sense alone since there also were other methods of funding on the table.

Gillibrand and Sen. Chuck Schumer, both N.Y. Democrats, have offered at least five other ways to pay for the measure, suggesting a deal could get done.

Republicans also could have presented their own solutions for funding.

Rather than move ahead with suggestions, work on the bill themselves, or just let it go to a vote, the Republicans in the Senate did nothing but block and ignore the bill. Even after all demands had been met by the President, the Republican Senators continued to delay and walk away.

Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) said he voted against the first responders bill because Republicans had threatened to vote against everything until tax cuts for the rich were extended and a measure to fund the government was passed.

Despite the fact that President Barack Obama had met the GOP demands, Senate Republicans continued to block action in the upper chamber until everything was complete and signed into law.

[…]

Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) also said he opposed moving forward on the bill because he wanted to get to tax cuts and the budget first. “I wanted to get to other items,” he said. He then added, upon further reflection, that he had actually been out of town and wasn’t around to vote to filibuster the bill. Brownback will become Kansas governor next and, he said, he was busy back home crafting the budget. He is recorded as not having voted.

They do not mince words. They were entirely focused on tax cuts for the rich. It not only was their number-one priority, they actually refused to accept anything other than that or their own budget needs as a priority. The health and safety of first responders, many of whom are in need for help this very minute, were ignored entirely.

Wow. Republican Senators feel they can openly say they have taken a stand (to protect tax cuts for the wealthiest few) with complete disregard for impact to the lives of men and women who now suffer as a result of service and dedication to their country.

The personal stories found on NY Daily News drive home why this has become a truly shocking and sad moment in American history.

[Disabled Ground Zero workder T. J. Gilmartin] hasn’t been able to work since 2008 and the youngest of his daughters is 15. Without the Zadroga bill passing, he will have very little money.

“I have three daughters to worry about,” he said, his voice cracking. “If this doesn’t happen, I don’t know how I’m going to do it. My daughters just lost their mother.”

Media matters, like The Daily Show, says the story is that there has been no story.

…the larger point here is that Republicans are now practicing an unprecedented brand of obstructionism and they’re doing without having to pay much of a political price. Why? Because the press is giving them a pass. The press is pretending what Republicans are doing is normal and everyday. It’s not. It’s radical.

I see it slightly differently. The story was ignored, which is terrible, but the story still may be heard. It at least has been reported online.

What is truly disturbing is the shallow and short-sighted ethics expressed by Republicans; a simple question now may be raised that could significantly harm American volunteerism, patriotism and national security. JFK famously told young Americans “Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country.”

The Republicans in the Senate, with their odd agenda, have just reformulated that question:

“Ask not what your country can do to protect your health and safety – ask what you can do to help us extend more tax breaks to the wealthy”.

Stop. Look. Listen in America

The BBC has a hilarious guide to American culture by Kevin Connolly

He points out that America may be rife with religious and violent zealots

To Europeans, for example, a gun is a weapon, pure and simple.

To many, but not all Americans, it is a badge of independence, and self-reliance – the tool of the engaged citizen who does not think that either the criminal, or the forces of the state, should have a monopoly on deadly force.

There is a great deal of irony in his dichotomy. Americans portray their terrorist enemy as a religious and violent zealot; the irony really comes out in the next paragraph.

Show [Europeans] a gun, and we picture a muscular ne’er-do-well in a balaclava menacing an elderly sub-postmistress.

An American is more likely to visualise a plucky homesteader crouching between an overturned sofa in a burning ranch house, preparing to defend his family to the death.

…unless you ask an American to describe a terrorist who must be disarmed, and then they will visualize a plucky homesteader crouching between an overturned sofa in burning ranch house, wearing a balaclava, like this guy:

In terms of religion, this section is spot-on:

If anything, over time, it is getting more religious rather than less. The motto In God We Trust was not added to American banknotes until the 1950s, for example.

Americans tied themselves in knots two years ago agonising over whether a black man, or a white woman could yet be elected president.

But here is a safe prediction. It will be a very long time before an atheist or agnostic gets anywhere near the White House.

A stark contrast with Europe where the opposite is increasingly the case.

A comedian recently pointed out that India has only been a democracy for about fifty years, and yet it has elected multiple religions, races and several women to their highest office without controversy. America’s democracy is past 200 years old but still struggles with acceptance of leaders from different races, religion and gender.

The report is not all critical, however. I also enjoyed his commentary on American security language.

…the daily American way with language is touched with brilliance, taut and crackling with life.

My favourite example is the simplest, the old railroad crossing sign that simply says: Stop. Look. Listen.

Impossible to shorten or clarify, it was written by an engineer for a country of new immigrants with limited English. It is not long, but it is still in use today, a rare example of perfect writing.

I look forward to the day America updates its 50s McCarthy-ist propaganda text of “In God We Trust”, which has been wildly successful, with something less ironic. It sounds like “Stop. Look. Listen” would be an excellent candidate.

Economist profiles Hans Rosling

A professor of international health at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden gets a boost from The Economist in a post titled Data visualisation: Hans Rosling’s greatest hits

THIS week’s edition of The Economist includes Technology Quarterly, which in turn contains a profile of Hans Rosling. He explains how the innovative use of infographics in public health (the topic of many of his presentations) dates back to Florence Nightingale

Rosling’s point is that political stability of a country should be measured by whether fertility rates are falling; that is an indicator of successful education and health services.

“When I went to work in Africa [in northern Mozambique in the early 1980s], it was my intention to work as a practising physician who would improve health with existing knowledge,” says Dr Rosling. “That epidemic [of malnutrition and inappropriately prepared cassava root] humbled me, and so I became a researcher.”

The Economist lists these highly illustrative and inspiring YouTube videos

2006:

2007:

2009:

2010: