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Mauritius has not received US proposal on Chagos Islands

Mauritius has not received US proposal on Chagos Islands

Mauritius said on Monday that ​it had not received any proposal from the Trump administration on ‌the Chagos Islands, after the Telegraph reported that the White House was considering a plan to buy the islands from Mauritius.

"The Mauritian government has ​taken note of the information reported by the Telegraph. ​As at today, it has not received any official ⁠proposal and has not been approached, either directly or ​indirectly, by the US administration regarding a separate agreement concerning ​Diego Garcia or the Chagos Archipelago," it said in a statement.

"Mauritius's position remains unchanged: its sovereignty over the Chagos (Archipelago) is non-negotiable."

The Telegraph reported ​on Sunday that the plan was among several options being ​drafted by the White House, in a paper aimed at providing alternatives ‌to ⁠British Prime Minister Keir Starmer ceding sovereignty of the Indian Ocean archipelago to Mauritius.

Britain's government in April put on hold its deal to cede sovereignty of the Chagos Islands, home to ​the U.S.-British ​Diego Garcia air ⁠base, which had been criticized by U.S. President Donald Trump.

Trump said in February the agreement ​was a "big mistake."

Britain forcibly displaced up to ​2,000 indigenous ⁠Chagossians in the late 1960s and 1970s to establish the base on the Diego Garcia atoll, but had last year ⁠agreed to ​give sovereignty to former colony Mauritius ​while paying 101 million pounds ($135 million) per year to secure the installation. (Reuters, 2026-06-08)