
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
LONDON/PORT LOUIS (Worthy News) – British Prime Minister Keir Starmer says he has signed an agreement handing over the sovereignty of one of the last remnants of the British Empire, the Chagos Islands, to Mauritius.
The archipelago in the Indian Ocean is home to a strategically important naval and bomber base on the largest of the islands, Diego Garcia.
Starmer says the agreement secures the future of a base “right at the foundation of our safety and security at home.”
The signing was delayed for several hours after a British judge imposed a last-minute injunction blocking the transfer. Another judge later lifted that injunction.
One of the last remnants of the British Empire, the Chagos Islands, have been under British control since 1814.
Britain split the islands away from Mauritius, a former British colony, in 1965, three years before Mauritius gained independence.
CONCERNED WOMEN
However, two Chagossian women representing the islands’ original residents took legal steps, saying they opposed the move as they were evicted decades ago to make way for the American military base.
Bernadette Dugasse and Bertrice Pompe, both British citizens, fear returning to the islands will be even more difficult once Mauritius takes control of them.
After the injunction was lifted, Pompe said it was “a very sad day” but vowed to continue fighting.
“We do not want to hand over our rights to Mauritius. We are not Mauritians,” she said outside the High Court. “The rights we are asking for now, we have been fighting for 60 years,” she added. “Mauritius is not going to give that to us.”
Yet despite their opposition, the agreement was due to be signed Thursday by British Prime Minister Starmer and Mauritian leader Navin Ramgoolam at a virtual ceremony.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
The Temple Institute in Jerusalem issued an extensive clarification on Monday following widespread misinformation concerning recent reports about a red heifer and the production of ritual ashes—an act central to biblical purity laws and, for many religious observers, deeply symbolic in the context of prophetic events.
The United States is moving aggressively to secure UN Security Council authorization for the new International Stabilization Force (ISF) in Gaza, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying Wednesday that Washington is “optimistic” that the draft resolution will advance within days — paving the way for deployment at the start of 2026.
With the 41-day government shutdown now set to end, President Donald Trump is preparing to launch an aggressive new healthcare reform push that the White House says will finally replace the “broken” Obamacare system Democrats created.
President Donald Trump has formally asked Israeli President Isaac Herzog to grant a full pardon to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, marking the strongest U.S. intervention yet in the long-running corruption trial that has deeply polarized Israeli society.
U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) announced that American forces, working alongside local Syrian partners, conducted more than 22 counterterrorism operations against ISIS between October 1 and November 6, significantly degrading the terror group’s operational capabilities across the region.
Archaeologists in the Czech capital have begun exhuming mass graves containing political prisoners executed under Czechoslovakia’s communist regime, in a major effort to identify victims whose resting places have remained unknown for more than seven decades.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has moved to contain mounting public anger over a major corruption scandal in the energy sector by firing two ministers accused of involvement in a vast bribery scheme, while Russian-affiliated churches report increased pressure during wartime.