It was for the UK and Mauritius to reach an "amicable" solution on the Diego Garcia Island dispute, government sources said today and asserted that the same was conveyed to the British Foreign Secretary during his talks with senior officials here recently.
The sources also suggested that the issue did not come up during British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson's meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as was being projected by some reports.
"There have been media reports that the visiting British Foreign Secretary raised the issue of Diego Garcia during his meetings in Delhi on January 18. The issue did come up in his discussions with senior officials.
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According to reports, Johnson, who was in India on three- day visit and attended "Raisina Dialogue" on January 18, had raised the issue with Modi and had sought Indian assistance in resolving current tensions between the UK, the US and Mauritius over the future of the American military base Diego Garcia.
One of the Chagos islands in the Indian Ocean, Diego Garcia was leased by Britain to the US for the military base two years before Mauritius got independence in 1968. After initially denying that the islands were inhabited, British officials forcibly expelled approximately 2,000 Mauritians living in Chagos to make way for the American base.
The lease expired recently, but has been renewed by London until December 20, 2036, much to the chagrin of Mauritius, which has threatened to take Britain to the International Court of Justice to resolve the dispute.
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