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On Friday 21st March 2025, the sun will set on the British "Empire"

dang

Recent and related:

UK will give sovereignty of Chagos Islands to Mauritius - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41729325 - Oct 2024 (282 comments)

Also:

UK to hand over Chagos back to Mauritius - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33463586 - Nov 2022 (52 comments)

zahlman

Thank you. I genuinely would have had no idea otherwise, why this specific date.

marc_abonce

I didn't know about this until now, but this BBC article seems to disagree with OP's Reddit post: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy78ejg71exo

> One of the largest islands on the tropical atoll, Diego Garcia, will remain a joint US-UK military base and is expected to remain so for 99 years with an option to renew.

> Mauritius will be able to begin a programme of resettlement on the Chagos Islands, but not on Diego Garcia.

So it seems like the military occupation will continue for at least 99 years if not longer, and the still living Chagossian islanders may never be allowed to return back home.

By the way, since this is a tech forum, it's worth pointing out that every time you pay for a .io domain you're funding this ongoing ethnic cleansing. BIOT is not a country, it has no permanent population and is currently nothing but a military base in a land that was completely ethnic cleansed in the 1970's.

Archelaos

Traditionally, political thinking makes a distinction between de jure and de facto sovereignty, or respectivley juridical sovereignty and empirical sovereignty. By limiting the transfer of de facto sovereignty to a period of 99 years, the treaty ensures that it cannot be interpreted as a transfer of de jure sovereignty. However, in the context of international law the term "sovereignty" without further qualification is nowadays widely used in the sense of de jure sovereignty. This emphasises the thought that under international law a transfer of sovereignty can only be the result of a legal act -- in other words: de jure sovereignty has priority over de facto sovereignty.

atombender

According to the British government, it receives no revenue from the .io domain, which owned by a private equity company. So if that is the case, the .io domain does not fund ethnic cleansing.

As to Diego Garcia, my understanding is that Mauritius will be given back sovereignty of it, as well as the other islands, and that the UK and US governments will merely lease the island of Diego Garcia. This is not an unusual arrangement. The UK and US have military bases around the world on foreign territory, to the exclusion of the local population.

Not so sure if this qualifies as ethnic cleansing when nobody is being forcibly removed from anywhere, since they're not actually there.

defrost

While "ethnic cleansing" has overtones of torture an or murder, "forcibly removed" is accurate and occurred from 1968 to the removal of the last Chagossians in 1973.

atombender

But we they were already removed, then any revenue from .io does not support it, since it already happened.

And while the continued existence of the UK/US base prevents Chagossians from living there, that seems unrelated to the question of sovereignty; for example, the US Air Force base in Ramstein also prevents Germans from living in the territory occupied by the base's footprint, but nobody calls this ethnic cleansing.

mixdup

> One of the largest islands on the tropical atoll, Diego Garcia, will remain a joint US-UK military base and is expected to remain so for 99 years with an option to renew.

This is not the same thing as maintaining sovereignty. The US has bases in many countries, but it's not native US soil

tialaramex

Yes. For example, in the town where I was born there's a US airbase. Well, I say airbase because that's what the paperwork says, its actual function as I understand it was a site for a school for the kids of American military personnel, there are no planes there.

When I worked for a defence contractor the Troubles were still a thing, so on the British base there'd be a chicane and armed gate guards, no crashing through the gates and blowing stuff up inside the base for you. But at the US airbase there was just a sign saying Condition Black (ie no danger) and you could walk in, presumably the terrorists weren't dumb enough to attack a bunch of American school kids whose parents were military given that a lot of their funding came from America...

Ostensibly the reason I'd be visiting that US airbase was vital urgent paperwork being transported personally by a British officer, who was entitled to the use of a vehicle which I was driving, to some senior American personnel - but we sure did seem to generate a lot of such paperwork and we always bought back donuts (which the Americans have on their airbase) ...

Anyway, that US airbase is definitely not American soil. I did actually own a passport, and I had the right to enter the US, but I was never asked about it because the airbase was in Britain, on British land, merely on loan to the Americans indefinitely.

photonthug

yeah technically embassies, bases, and even individual rooms in international airports are sovereign in the legal sense afaik, ie that host country laws need not apply. By this logic I guess the sun never sets on quite a few empires. At the same time if we were talking about “native” then maybe the sun has always set on every empire, since protectorates, territories, or fully conquered subsidiaries will never seem native unless they were originally next door, in which case.. you’re unlikely to get that many extra time zones as part of the deal.

oohaargh

There's a difference between being a British colony and allowing Britain to have a military base on your land, so nothing in disagreement with the original post there

mlindner

You're calling it ethnic cleansing but there was no native population on the islands. The so-called "Chagossian islanders" were people brought there against their will to work.

marc_abonce

As far as I know, the definition doesn't require the population to be "native". For example, history has plenty of cases of ethnic cleansing against Jewish people in Europe. Or at least Wikipedia considers it as such: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_cleansing

Also, the people that were "brought there against their will to work" were the 1800's ancestors of the people that were forcibly removed in the 1970's. How many centuries does it take for a group of people to gain the right against forceful displacement?

lawrencejgd

Relevant What If from Xkcd https://what-if.xkcd.com/48/

null

[deleted]

mlindner

Every single one of these recent territorial handovers seems to have gone poorly for the local residents, notable example being Hong Kong. Not sure this is that good of an idea. This more seems to be getting done to win international brownie points rather than any other reason.

I'm also worried about possible interference in the use of Diego Garcia. Letting non-military people on to the island is a security risk. The news reporting talks about the military base remaining "on the island", but the entire island is a military base.

AustinG08

the world runs on brownie points now, prepare accordingly

gizajob

Britain is currently getting asked to pay £18Trillion in reparations for slavery, when it is struggling to find £20billion in the upcoming budget to fund the black hole in the public finances, so you might be correct.

ARandomerDude

Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great! She has become a dwelling place for demons.