Britain’s Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has come under fire from Reform Party leader Nigel Farage and the Conservative Party over new changes to a deal to surrender the Chagos Islands, a British overseas territory which hosts a strategic base, to Mauritius.
Mauritius’ Prime Minister, Navin Ramgoolam, claims changes have been made to front-load payments from Britain—Starmer has bizarrely agreed to pay Mauritius to take away the islands, not the other way around—and modify how they are calculated to adjust for possible inflation. “What’s the point of getting money and then having half of it at the end?” he told the Mauritian parliament earlier this week. New estimates claim the deal’s total cost could be as high as $22.5 billion.
Prime Minister Starmer defended the agreement, emphasizing the necessity of maintaining the UK-US military base on Diego Garcia under a 99-year lease included in the deal. However, the base could be maintained indefinitely by simply not giving the islands away—particularly as the Chagossian islanders evicted from the territory to make way for the base do not want it to be transferred to Mauritius, which is around 1,400 miles away and has only the most tenuous links to them.
Reform leader Farage questioned how Prime Minister Starmer and the leftist Labour Party government could justify sending billions to Mauritius while, for instance, cutting off winter fuel payments to seniors.
Conservative Party lawmaker Robert Jenrick noted on X that the lead negotiators for Britain and Mauritius are both long-time friends of Prime Minister Starmer and helped his election campaign. “Quisling Keir cares more about his reputation amongst the international legal fraternity than what’s good for Britain. This disastrous deal is nothing short of traitorous,” Jenrick wrote.
The plan to hand over sovereignty of the British Indian Ocean Territory, as Chagos is officially termed, was initially publicized in October after a deal with former Mauritian leader Pravind Jugnauth. However, following Jugnauth’s electoral defeat, his successor, Ramgoolam, criticized the already overgenerous original terms, demanding further concessions.
Complications increased after Donald J. Trump’s re-election as U.S. president, with some many on Trump’s team unhappy with sovereignty over the islands being transferred to an ally of China.