Last modified: 2009-08-15 by phil nelson
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image by Georges H. Wuethrich, 10 May 2000
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Chagos Islands are part of British Indian Ocean Territory.
Rob Raeside, 11 May 2000
Seen on Mauritian TV news (12.11.2000), during a demonstration of the
former inhabitants of the Chagos islands, many copies of the Chagos flag. It
is an horizontal tricolor red-black-blue. The upper stripe seemed to be red
(and not orange).
Kuzul Ar Brezhoneg, 20 November 2000
About a month ago, there was a British documentary on TV here in Australia.
It was called "Chagos Islanders", and was about the plight of the
8000 Chagosians deported from their homeland to Mauritius by the British. They
speak French or a Creole language based on French. The elected representative
of the Chagosians in Mauritius is Olivier Bencoult, who was involved in high
profile High Court cases on the legality of the deportation of his people. He
explained the significance of the colours of the flag as follows:
- The orange stripe represents the plantation on Chagos which is now closed
- The black stripe is for all the struggle and the bad moments experienced by
the Chagosian people.
- The (light) blue stripe is for the lagoons of Chagos and for the future.
I got the feeling that he was the originator of the flag. The flag seems to
have proportions of 3:5. And, unlike the image on the website, the orange
stripe is the same width as the blue stripe (though both are wider than the
black stripe).
Zoran Vukojevic, 18 September 2002
The Chagossians (Chagos Islands natives) have been expelled from the Chagos
in 1973. They wish to go back in the Chagos. The only flag for the Chagossians
is a recent one. The only site devoted to the Chagossians is http://www.chagos.org/.
Georges H. Wuethrich, 10 May 2000
The islanders were really expelled from Chagos and never allowed to return.
A few of them who had attempted a clandestine expedition to visit and honour
the graves of their ancestors never showed up again. The whole story was
recently highlighted in a few international newspapers, because the islanders
are desperately looking for international support to their claim. If I
remember correctly, the leader of the islanders got political asylum in
Norway.
Ivan Sache, 14 May 2000
The Chagos people exist and were deported to Mauritius. I see some years
ago a small demonstration (because I believe that there's only 100/200 Chagos
people) in Mauritius and a flag was hoisted but I believe that the colors are
different from the ones in this page.
Jaume Ollé, 15 May 2000
It's worth noting that the Chagossians, earlier this year, won the right in
the British courts to return to their homeland. The British Government has
accepted the court ruling, and arrangements are supposed to be made to ensure
they can return, and that they are compensated for the British Government's
(now ruled to be) illegal expulsion of the islanders.
Ken Bagnall, 21 September 2002