This 1971 file photo shows residents of Diego Garcia Island receiving the news of the introduction of a law that will have all the Chagos Islands' population deported. Photo: Chagos Refugee Group via AFP

Britain should relinquish control of the Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean “as rapidly as possible,” the UN’s top court said Monday about a decades-old dispute with Mauritius over an archipelago that is home to a massive American airbase.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) said in a legal opinion that Britain had illegally split the islands from Mauritius before independence in 1968, after which all the islanders were evicted.

Mauritius and the exiled Chagossians reacted with delight to the “historic” opinion delivered by judges in The Hague, which is non-binding but carries substantial symbolic and political weight.

“The United Kingdom’s continued administration of the Chagos Archipelago constitutes a wrongful act,” chief judge Abdulqawi Ahmed Yusuf said.

“The United Kingdom is under an obligation to bring an end to its administration of the Chagos Archipelago as rapidly as possible, thereby allowing Mauritius to complete the decolonization of its territory.”

The UN General Assembly in 2017 adopted a resolution presented by Mauritius and supported by African countries asking the ICJ to offer legal advice on the island chain’s fate and the legality of the deportations.

Colonial power Britain split off the islands from Mauritius – which lies around 2,000 kilometers away – three years before Port Louis gained independence in 1968. It also paid Mauritius £3 million.

Between 1968 and 1973, around 2,000 Chagos islanders were evicted and went to Britain, Mauritius and the Seychelles, to make way for a military base on Diego Garcia, the largest of the islands. The evictions were described in a British diplomatic cable at the time as the removal of “some few Tarzans and Man Fridays.”

Diego Garcia is now under lease to the United States and played a key strategic role in the Cold War before being used as a staging ground for US bombing campaigns against Afghanistan and Iraq in the 2000s.

Olivier Bancoult, chairman of the Mauritius-based Chagos Refugees Group, told reporters outside court that he was “so happy.”

He added, “It is a big victory against an injustice done by the British government for many years. We people have been suffering for many years – I am so lucky today.”

Mauritius Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth called it a “historic moment for Mauritius and all its people.”

He said in a statement: “Our territorial integrity will now be made complete, and when that occurs, the Chagossians and their descendants will finally be able to return home.”

There was no immediate reaction from London or Washington.

The ICJ opinion comes as a stunning blow to London in a case that goes to the heart of historic issues of decolonization and current questions about the UK’s place in the world as it frantically prepares to leave the European Union.

Mauritius’s lawyer Philippe Sands said there was “no wiggle room” in the judges’ view and that London would resist pressure to comply.

“I suspect the United Kingdom will say to itself, what resistance can we put up to moving forward – and particularly in the context of Brexit, as the United Kingdom finds itself a little bit isolated in the world,” he told journalists outside the court.

When judges heard the case in September, Mauritius argued that it was illegal for Britain to have broken up its territory while it was still the colonial power.

Britain, while apologising for the “shameful” way it evicted thousands of islanders, insisted that it was wrong for Mauritius to bring the case to the ICJ.

Meanwhile, Washington said the court had a “duty” not to take a position on the dispute.

The Chagos Islanders have already taken their fight through the courts in the UK, where their supporters included the current Labour opposition leader, Jeremy Corbyn.

The legal opinion is only the 28th since the ICJ was set up in 1946 in the wake of World War II to provide a tribunal to resolve disputes between UN member states.

Previous opinions include one on Israel’s West Bank barrier in 2004, which judges said was illegal, and declaring legal Kosovo’s declaration of independence in 2010.

– with reporting by Agence France-Presse

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