FRANCE | A Colonial Crisis?

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • In April 2023, France launched a major security operation to round up and deport tens of thousands of migrants who had arrived illegally on Mayotte, one of its overseas departments in the Indian Ocean. However, Operation Wuambushu (“Take Back”) caused an outcry amongst human rights groups. At the same time, it also cast a light on the contested status of the island, which is a part of the archipelago of the Comoros Islands.
    Even today, the legacy of European imperialism is still felt worldwide. But it is most acutely felt in territories that were partitioned as part of a process of partial decolonisation. Mayotte is one of the most interesting examples. It refused to join the Union of the Comoros, which unilaterally declared independence from France in 1975. Instead, following its referendum, it decided to remain a part of France. In the years since then, it has gradually integrated further into France - to the point that it is now the country's 101st department and one of its five overseas departments, alongside French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique and Reunion. But this integration has also made the island a destination for Comorans seeking a better life. But as the number of migrants reaches unsustainable levels and social problems grow, the Mahorais (the inhabitants of Mayotte) have called for action. And this led to the latest massive crackdown by French security forces. But in the face of anger from Comoros, the operation has also cast an important spotlight on the consequences of the partition of the Comoros Islands fifty years ago.
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    VIDEO CHAPTERS
    00:00 Introduction and Titles
    00:42 Colonialism, Partition and Mayotte
    01:49 France and Mayotte
    03:39 History of the Comoros Islands
    04:35 Decolonisation and the Comoros Islands
    05:54 Comoros Independence and the Separation of Mayotte
    06:48 Mayotte’s Integration into France
    09:09 Comoran Immigration in Mayotte
    11:10 Operation Wuambushu, Mayotte 2023
    12:12 Comoros-France Relations and the Mayotte Question
    SOURCES AND FURTHER READING
    Government of Mayotte
    www.mayotte.gouv.fr
    Government of the Union of the Comoros
    beit-salam.km
    The Union of the Comoros and Mayotte | France Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/en/cou...
    French Ministry of the Interior and Overseas | Website
    www.interieur.gouv.fr
    French Ministry of the Interior and Overseas | CZcams
    www.youtube.com/@MinistereInt...
    UN Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial; Countries and Peoples
    www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-...
    EQUIPMENT USED TO MAKE THIS VIDEO
    kit.co/JamesKerLindsay
    DISCLAIMERS
    - The contents of this video and any views expressed in it were not reviewed in advance nor determined by any outside persons or organisation.
    - Some of the links above are affiliate links. These pay a small commission if you make a purchase. This helps to support the channel and will be at no additional cost to you.
    #Mayotte #France #Comoros #Wuambushu #Colonialism #Partition

Komentáře • 755

  • @theinternetofrandomthings7796

    The fascinating thing about this, is the fact the UN has consistently gone against the wishes of the Mayotte population to remain a part of france. So much for supporting self determination.

    • @jeffmorris5802
      @jeffmorris5802 Před rokem +21

      Eh.... the situation is similar to the Donbas in Ukraine. If you populate an area with colonists, then those colonists vote to remain, does that really count? The answer is no. No it doesn't.

    • @thereita1052
      @thereita1052 Před rokem +49

      ​​@@jeffmorris5802 that ain't the question in Dombass.
      The rebels always where Russian funded and where originally indipendentist not pro joining Russia.
      The Dombass separatist could have rebeled for thousend different reasons if Russia wanted It to be so.

    • @Leiwanderer
      @Leiwanderer Před rokem +71

      ​​@@jeffmorris5802 But they aren't colonists. At least not 90%. From what I remember, Mayotte used to be the political center of the Comoros under French rule. This meant, that the population had more power and a closer connection to France than the people on the other islands, leading them to reject independence.
      Donbas is a very different story and it is actually unclear if a majority of the people of the Donbas actually ever supported becoming a part of Russia.

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Před rokem +30

      Self-determination is one of UN's values but so is territorial integrity. It's not like any arbitrary region has the right to self-determination just because a majority of the population there want it. A single family can't demand that their house and lot becomes a sovereign country even if they all agree on that. So what kind of regions of populations do have a right to self-determination? Solve that problem decisively and you'll be deserving of the Nobel Peace Prize.

    • @Leiwanderer
      @Leiwanderer Před rokem +28

      @@seneca983 I think that what makes this case special, is that the region is not arbitrary but as an island has a clear natural boundary.

  • @Harry_S._
    @Harry_S._ Před rokem +196

    The moment you realize that Frances largest neighbour is Brazil, not Germany

    • @federicoionescu6921
      @federicoionescu6921 Před rokem +7

      🤢🤮

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +34

      Haha! Blimey. When you put it that way!

    • @ag4444
      @ag4444 Před rokem +16

      And how long will it take for you to realize that even Spain is bigger than Germany?

    • @glassman1533
      @glassman1533 Před rokem +18

      Actually, if you consider land area and maritime borders, France's biggest neighbor is Canada.

    • @Bb13190
      @Bb13190 Před rokem +15

      @@glassman1533 what he meant by largest neighbour was the longest land border.
      France share his longest land border with Brazil.

  • @4Usuality
    @4Usuality Před rokem +230

    I'm more pro self determination than forced integration of previous colonial possessions into new countries. Mayotte in my opinion obviously wants to be part of France, they should not be forced to join another country at this point.

    • @PendulumCancel
      @PendulumCancel Před rokem +66

      This video got crazier by the minute. Learning about the UN pressure going directly against the wishes of Mayotte's population, the Comoros government's crazy declarations about Mayotte (and the 270,000 inhabitants living there) being theirs and then finally the waves of illegal immigrants (which imo sounds exactly like what Belarus did to Poland/Germany a couple of years ago) has me shaking my head. It takes a lot and I mean A LOT to make France sound like the good guy in colonialism related matter, but I have to hand it to the Comoros government and the UN. They went above and beyond the call of duty and actually made France and even Le Pen look like the knights in shining armor lmao.

    • @abaibrahim6709
      @abaibrahim6709 Před rokem +8

      Considering that the majority of the island's population is black, African, and Muslim, what cultural, ethnic, or religious ties could there be between the island and France?

    • @FairyCRat
      @FairyCRat Před rokem +55

      ​@@abaibrahim6709There are a lot of people in France who are considered black but still identify with French culture

    • @jakegarvin7634
      @jakegarvin7634 Před rokem

      Forced to join another...shittier country. Just like the Falklands and Argentina

    • @tienouchou
      @tienouchou Před rokem +2

      You should wonder who got the right to vote, who was awarded the French nationality. Half of the population is Comorian and some of them is living in Mayotte since decades. They don't have the right to vote.

  • @DemPilafian
    @DemPilafian Před rokem +22

    The fact that Comoros didn't want their own people back says a lot about how desperate things are in Comoros. What a depressing situation.

    • @n-wordaficianado2990
      @n-wordaficianado2990 Před 11 měsíci +8

      yet they also want to claim Mayotte as their own territory so they can make it as poor and desperate

  • @kingdonaltron
    @kingdonaltron Před rokem +14

    If Mayotte wants to be part of France, let it be part of France. Like that should literally be the end of the conversation.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +4

      Thanks. Yes and no. It’s really interesting to read the reactions to this video. As I mentioned, there is a long-standing principle that colonial territories shouldn’t be partitioned. And many people would instinctively condemn France for doing it. But this case perhaps pushes people to think a little bit harder about it all. It isn’t as clearcut as it seems. We often think that there must be some sort of strategic reason for these sorts of partition decisions. But I’m sure France would rather not have this problem at all. In that sense, there are some interesting parallels with Northern Ireland.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem +1

      ​​@@JamesKerLindsay They'd rather not have this problem as I'd rather have my cake after eating it, but not eat it is not something I would ever consider. All would be done if they had followed the full results of the referendum done in the whole islands back then. Instead here we are now...

    • @zebulonreynaud919
      @zebulonreynaud919 Před rokem +2

      @@JamesKerLindsay "yes and no". not to you to say, you are incompetent. saying the partition of islands is the root of poverty in comoros is a blatant lie.

    • @markv1974
      @markv1974 Před rokem +1

      @@JamesKerLindsaybut the question is did france take the whole area as a whole or did france take disparate kingdoms and made into a whole? If they were separate before then the comoros cannot claim territorial integrity when there was no united comoros at the onset.

  • @lordcanard4428
    @lordcanard4428 Před rokem +93

    Always interesting to see foreigners talk about the french overseas territories. Most people tend to forget that WE WANT to remain part of france (I'm from Reunion Island btw). Most Mahorais are coming to my island because comorians are turning Mayotte into a shithole with gangs dismembering people with machetes. Mayotte CHOSE multiple times to remain part of France, they are the department that votes the most for the Rassemblement National. The Mahorais take being called a comorian as an INSULT, they don't have to pay for the comoros being an awful place to live.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +24

      I think I made all this VERY clear in the video. And while France’s actions are in fact contrary to general principles of international law, I deliberately highlighted the complex moral and political questions at play.

    • @lordcanard4428
      @lordcanard4428 Před rokem +18

      @@ems4884 well the reasons to be part of france are many and i can't speak on behalf of all the islands so i will try to give explanations as to why my island (Reunion) wanted to stay french. First of all there were no native on the island, no one lived there before french mutineers and later pirates called the island home. Then when we became a colony most of the land was bought by rich french aristocrats who set up plantations and brought slaves and workers from all the colonies (India, Africa, Indochina, China, the Caribeans etc) so the island don't really have an entity prior to colonization. We are pretty patriotic here, most people goes to the army (half of my class in college ended up enlisting for exemple), we love france, we are the ones who voices the most our concerns to the direction the country is heading, this can be seen during every presidential elections. also there's the fact that we couldn't survive without france, we are a tiny little island in the middle of nowhere without ressources (we were a plantation colony, nothing more) the island is too small to sustain the population with food, for exemple during WW2 there was a famine here due to lack of food coming from france, and back then the population was small, nowadays we are almost a million.

    • @lordcanard4428
      @lordcanard4428 Před rokem

      The problems we face here today have more to do with the complete incompetence of the government to deal with anything, Macron don't even listen to the people living 5km from him so he won't listen to people living more than 11000km from his fucking palace. We basically have the same problems that metropolitan france face, its just 5 times worse because the government doesn't care about anything. truth is we love france more than it loves us, more than it love itself in fact. As for the other islands and Guyane i think they have similar reasons but i won't speak for them

    • @neilnelson7603
      @neilnelson7603 Před rokem +1

      Lets also forget Mayotte is filled French colonists that control most of the administrative roles there.

    • @charlesjenner1951
      @charlesjenner1951 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Independent Comorians are very proud of their national identity, even though many young people come to work in France like the inhabitants of Mayotte. They are offended if they are referred to as Mahorais, and consider themselves freer. Unfortunately, no one wants to invest in the Comorian islands because of the political instability, which has no remedy. The African Union is gradually gaining a strong foothold on the three islands, and is calling for Mayotte to be reintegrated, but I don't know if that's going to be an improvement.

  • @liat5443
    @liat5443 Před rokem +133

    The people of Mayotte have voted routinely to be part of France, so I don't see the argument for transferring them to the poorer and less developed Comoros. It just doesn't make much sense to me.
    If the people wanted to join the Comoros, they should, but clearly, they dont
    (Ps I'm irish)

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +55

      Well, that last bit was a bit of a kicker! :-)
      But of course Ireland is another very good example of this problem. What happens when you have decolonisation running up against the self-determination of a particular group that wants to stay a part of the colonial state. In this case, it’s a little different as the Mahorais are largely indigenous, rather than French settlers. It’s rather an interesting, and far from straightforward, discussion.

    • @liat5443
      @liat5443 Před rokem +24

      @Prof James Ker-Lindsay true. I'm not particularly pro irish unification as my view is that any unification should see a super majority (60%+). Otherwise, we would see issues in the long run.
      (Thanks for the heart)

    • @futuredoctor1966
      @futuredoctor1966 Před rokem

      Who is the person who is voting to be part of colonial power
      French they do this proganda
      Long time when Djibouti take their freedom they said we want to join Somalia
      but French they make fake voting and said they said we want to be a country
      that time French Frist goal was that Djibouti join Ethiopia but in Djibouti they don't want to be under colonial agian

    • @alexanderkowal5710
      @alexanderkowal5710 Před rokem +4

      Mental slavery my guy

    • @heycidskyja4668
      @heycidskyja4668 Před rokem +34

      @@alexanderkowal5710 Oh dear.

  • @rod9829
    @rod9829 Před rokem +92

    I don’t understand why anyone from any body (African union/ United Nations) would force mayotte to join Comoros if it’s contrary to their material interest/ right to self determination. It’s completely illogical

    • @abaibrahim6709
      @abaibrahim6709 Před rokem +5

      What if we conducted referendums in various European territories on mainland Europe to explore the possibility of changing countries? For example, could certain parts of Estonia or Ukraine potentially become part of Russia through this process? While my answer is a firm "No" to this idea, it is intriguing to observe that formal Western colonial powers currently find such actions acceptable.

    • @iihamed711
      @iihamed711 Před rokem +3

      Because of territorial integrity.

    • @tienouchou
      @tienouchou Před rokem

      You should wonder who got the right to vote, who was awarded the French nationality. Half of the population is Comorian and some of them is living in Mayotte since decades. They don't have the right to vote.

    • @unsfofficer4818
      @unsfofficer4818 Před rokem

      ​@@tienouchouOf course they are illegal immigrants.
      Why exactly should illegal immigrants have the right to vote?

    • @simpmaster7995
      @simpmaster7995 Před rokem +7

      @@abaibrahim6709 Copy paste pasta Somali???

  • @khairulhelmihashim2510
    @khairulhelmihashim2510 Před rokem +38

    While Northern Ireland and Mayotte decided not to be part of a new nation, Malaysia did expel Singapore, it's richest, most developed territory from the federation in 1960s against the wishes of many Singaporean citizens and politicians then.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +12

      Thanks. I actually made a video on that topic czcams.com/video/8PJ9JTod9X0/video.html It was a fascinating, and indeed unique, case in modern international relations.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem +3

      How exactly did Ireland vote for independence and northern Ireland to remain with the UK? I ask because I don't know. What was the referendum and did it win in every town in Ireland and lose in every town of northern Ireland?

    • @UNSKIALzPSN
      @UNSKIALzPSN Před rokem +10

      ​@@FOLIPE Initially the UK government wanted to make the whole of Ireland a "free state" with a home parliament (later independent). This was done due to armed rebellion in Ireland against British rule.
      However, yes, the majority in *Northern* Ireland at the time were both very pro-UK and very anti-Catholic (Dominant religion of the South). Domestic militias formed to resist any Southern rule. To avert the risk of civil war, the UK kept Northern Ireland, hoping to reunify it again later under a new arrangement.
      Of course, 100 years later, we're still here! 😂

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      @@UNSKIALzPSN But when did they vote on it

    • @UNSKIALzPSN
      @UNSKIALzPSN Před rokem +3

      @@FOLIPE They didn't really. The UK unilaterally partitioned Ireland.
      Violence and boycotted votes (where half the community didn't participate) kept the status quo, until the Good Friday Agreement (GFA) was finally signed in 1998. This was approved via an all-island referendum, and states that NI is entitled to a further referendum to unify with the South, if it seems likely that a majority would vote in favour.
      The GFA is the main reason NI still exists today, and is also the tool to decide it's future. It is backed by the UN, EU, Ireland, UK and USA. So if you want a "vote" to point to, that's probably it. 1998.

  • @tosmodragoon
    @tosmodragoon Před rokem +5

    VIVE LA FRANCE 🇨🇵 🇨🇵 🇨🇵 From a french of Mayotte !

  • @theconqueringram5295
    @theconqueringram5295 Před rokem +9

    I mean, the people of Mayotte want to remain a part of France, they should remain a part of France.

  • @theobanse1494
    @theobanse1494 Před rokem +17

    A few things to add :
    1.There has never been a political unity of the Comorian islands before the creation of the Comoros by France. It is propaganda of the Comorian government to say that the Comoros archipelago has always been a united whole. Like explained in the video, the sultans of these islands were at war with each other. An ethnolinguistic unity does not necessarily lead to political unity.
    2.At the time of the independence referendum, the French president at the time, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, was in favour of the unity of the Comoros and did not want to separate the archipelago. It was the people of Mayotte who managed to convince the French parliament to take the result of the referendum island by island and thus keep the French presence in Mayotte.
    3. Never in the history of France has a people been consulted so much on its belonging to France, Mayotte was French before Nice and Savoy.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +4

      Thanks so much for the extra details. Interestingly, a point I didn’t mention was that France in fact vetoed a UN Security Council resolution asking it to call of the Mayotte referendum. (The UK and USA abstained.) It was one of the few occasions where France has used its veto. Even today, it stands out for only using int in extreme cases. In fact, it hasn’t used it in quarter of a century!

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      Not the first time the french parliament committed an illegal mistake in Africa

    • @theobanse1494
      @theobanse1494 Před rokem +7

      @@JamesKerLindsay Of course! Concerning Operation Wambushu, it was requested by the Mahorais themselves, hence their massive support, whereas the left in France is opposed to it. The situation has been tense for a long time, the violence has been anchored on the island for far too long and the Mahorais have been calling for help for years. Today we are at a point of no return, if the people of Mayotte do not see their security and their living conditions improve in the coming months, they will take the law into their hands. And this is a real risk. It's been years since the population of Mayotte took matters into their own hands by destroying the illegal housing with the (unofficial) support of the authorities.
      Operation Wambushu is also being used by the government to turn the page on the highly unpopular pension reform and to launch a new unpopular reform on immigration at the national level.
      There are also real geopolitical stakes behind Wambushu for France's position in the Indo-Pacific. China and Russia are watching what is happening. If France does not weigh face with the Comoros who instrumentalize immigration, the image of France in Africa will be impacted once again.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      @Irvine khulekani The thing is, if you want to live in France, you move to France. You can't make a neighborhood poll and then annex your town to France. That's not how it works

    • @markv1974
      @markv1974 Před rokem +5

      @@irvinekhulekaniif they had different sultans then how can they be one country? Or even be united? Lol..

  • @andrewsarantakes639
    @andrewsarantakes639 Před rokem +53

    Thanks, as always, for laying out this topic in such a balanced academic fashion. Awesome content!
    It seems the people of Mayotte indicated their desire to remain as part of France. Despite international bodies to enforce their concept of a "geographical political construct," the people of Mayotte chose the pathway they wanted to follow & remained part of France.
    In an effort to maintain the rule of law, France has exercised it sovereign right to territorial integrity by starting to remove migrates who are, in fact, in France illegally.
    As a political entity, France governs itself as it chooses. Laws are and should be the foundation to an orderly society. Without laws, anarchy results. Despite the unfortunate optics of this situation in Mayotte, France is moving to maintain stability of its society by enforcement of French laws in removing people who, by their own initiative, entered Mayotte illegally. The optics are bad, but if enforcement is not established, a worse situation will develop. Politics is a difficult Art, but France, through its own democratic processes, is attempting to conduct the Art of politics. Thank you again for the outstanding content you provide. Your efforts help to inform & educate such a vast number of people is appreciated.
    👍

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      What if a neighborhood of France indicated it's desire to belong to another country?

    • @theobanse1494
      @theobanse1494 Před rokem +7

      @@FOLIPE it's not about becoming French, it's about staying French

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      ​​@@theobanse1494 They weren't a part of France though, so it is about becoming french. And what about Oran and Algiers who didn't want autonomy inside algeria? These ones WERE a part of France. Also why did mainland France vote count in the 1961 referendum but not the vote of other comoro islands in the Mayotte case? At the time Mayotte WAS surely Comoros.
      The hypocrisy is endless

  • @julianivanov3058
    @julianivanov3058 Před rokem +28

    This crisis really sheds light on the complex and over unjustly oversimplified history of colonialism. Self-determination, colonial and post-colonial exploitation, and corruption combine to create a very complicate global issue. I really appreciate this video's in-depth look.

    • @tosmodragoon
      @tosmodragoon Před rokem +6

      The French have put an end to Arab-Muslim slavery on our island of lagoons. France protected us from the Malagasy razias and protected us from the Comorian brothers who killed us. France gave us shoes and allowed us to have beautiful houses by replacing them with our old houses made of earth. This is why France will always be at home in Mayotte! France has all the recognition of the Mahorais. Long live France ! 🇨🇵

    • @nkyiamon8563
      @nkyiamon8563 Před 10 měsíci

      @@tosmodragoon
      France so desperate to feed on Africa
      When Sékou Touré of Guinea decided in 1958 to get out of french colonial empire, and opted for the country independence, the french colonial elite in Paris got so furious, and in a historic act of fury the french administration in Guinea destroyed everything in the country which represented what they called the benefits from french colonization.
      Three thousand French leh the country, taking all their property and destroying anything that which could not be moved: schools, nurseries, public administration buildings were crumbled; cars, books, medicine, research institute instruments, tractors were crushed and sabotaged; horses, cows in the farms were killed, and food in warehouses were burned or poisoned.
      The purpose of this outrageous act was to send a clear message to all other colonies that the consequences for rejecting France would be very high.
      Slowly fear spread through the african elite, and none aher the Guinea events ever found the courage to follow the example of Sékou Touré, whose slogan was ”We prefer freedom in poverty to opulence in slavery.”
      Sylvanus Olympio, the first president of the Republic of Togo, a tiny country in west Africa, found a middle ground solution with the French.
      He didn’t want his country to continue to be a french dominion, therefore he refused to sign the colonisation continuation pact De Gaulle proposed, but agree to pay an annual debt to France for the so called benefits Togo got from french colonization.
      It was the only conditions for the French not to destroy the country before leaving. However, the amount estimated by France was so big that the reimbursement of the so called ”colonial debt” was close to 40% of the country budget in 1963.
      The financial situation of the newly independent Togo was very unstable, so in order to get out the situation, Olympio decided to get out the french colonial money FCFA (the franc for french african colonies), and issue the country own currency.
      On January 13, 1963, three days aher he started printing his country own currency, a squad of illiterate soldiers backed by France killed the first elected president of newly independent Africa. Olympio was killed by an ex French Foreign Legionnaire army sergeant called Etienne Gnassingbe who supposedly received a bounty of $612 from the local French embassy for the hit man job.
      Olympio’s dream was to build an independent and self-sufficient and self-reliant country. But the French didn’t like the idea.
      On June 30, 1962, Modiba Keita, the first president of the Republic of Mali, decided to withdraw from the french colonial currency FCFA which was imposed on 12 newly independent African countries. For the Malian president, who was leaning more to a socialist economy, it was clear that colonisation continuation pact with France was a trap, a burden for the country development.
      On November 19, 1968, like, Olympio, Keita will be the victim of a coup carried out by another ex French Foreign legionnaire, the Lieutenant Moussa Traoré.
      In fact during that turbulent period of African fighting to liberate themselves from European colonization, France would repeatedly use many ex Foreign legionnaires to carry out coups against elected presidents:
      • - On January 1st, 1966, Jean-Bédel Bokassa, an ex french foreign legionnaire, carried a coup against David Dacko, the first President of the Central African Republic.
      • - On January 3, 1966, Maurice Yaméogo, the first President of the Republic of Upper Volta, now called Burkina Faso, was victim of a coup carried by Aboubacar Sangoulé Lamizana, an ex French legionnaire who fought with french troops in Indonesia and Algeria against these countries independence.
      • - on 26 October 1972, Mathieu Kérékou who was a security guard to President Hubert Maga, the first President of the Republic of Benin, carried a coup against the president, aher he attended French military schools from 1968 to 1970.
      In fact, during the last 50 years, a total of 67 coups happened in 26 countries in Africa, 16 of those countries are french ex-colonies, which means 61% of the coups happened in Francophone Africa.

    • @nkyiamon8563
      @nkyiamon8563 Před 10 měsíci

      @@tosmodragoon
      What about BOB DENARD ??

  • @idraote
    @idraote Před 11 měsíci +8

    The situation is grotesque on many counts, but one of the most ludicrous aspects of it all is that, were France to release Mayotte to the Comore, the Comoreans would lose their only hope of improvement as it would only take a few year for Mayotte to regress back to Comore economical situation.
    Another ludicrous aspect is that by crowding the "luckier" island, Comorean have already significantly worsened Mayotte economics and social life thereby defying their original purpose.

  • @TheAnonymmynona
    @TheAnonymmynona Před rokem +39

    Self-determination as a principal, seems quite holow if, when the choice you don't like comes to pass. There are continues calls for "self-determination" until another choice is made.

    • @mojewjewjew4420
      @mojewjewjew4420 Před rokem

      Finally someone sees it, just like democracy it sounds good in theory but is very different in reality, if you have an population of morons you get a idiocracy or mob rule.

  • @peacewillprevail1
    @peacewillprevail1 Před rokem +8

    In 2014 when Mayotte was made outer region of EU, the European Council unanimously recognized Mayotte as part of France. UN may have voted resolutions in the 90’s against it but EU countries position is de facto different.

  • @kugul1683
    @kugul1683 Před rokem +6

    You always find the most interesting and unknown issues, thanks for the videos!

  • @abzzmalik1642
    @abzzmalik1642 Před rokem +9

    Muslim island supporting Far right in France this must be mind blwing 😂😂😂

    • @FlamingBasketballClub
      @FlamingBasketballClub Před rokem

      Muslims aren't far left nor right so 😂

    • @fabs8498
      @fabs8498 Před rokem +1

      Beaucoup de frzncais sont musulmans et viennent d'ex colonies. Quel est le probleme ? ,

  • @peterkops6431
    @peterkops6431 Před rokem +6

    What an interesting subject. I had no idea about any of this. The Prof certainly shines a spotlight on a lot of important events that receive minimal “mainstream media” coverage.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem

      Thanks so much, Peter. It is surprising just how little this has been covered. I could find next to nothing in the Anglophone media.

    • @peterkops6431
      @peterkops6431 Před rokem

      @Mira Moche I kind of suppose that the media can state that not covering these sorts of issues is not the same as hiding it. We both know it is. Thanks for your comment by the way. I am more used to receiving trolling insults than considered replies.

  • @hilestoby2628
    @hilestoby2628 Před rokem +9

    Great video as usual professor. Its interesting to consider the amount of exclusive economic zones in nations like France and Portugal have from overseas territories. Keep up the good work.

  • @hrishikeshmasurkar8434
    @hrishikeshmasurkar8434 Před rokem +4

    Great video Professor, thanks for bringing up a topic that many would not have heard of

  • @GazilionPT
    @GazilionPT Před rokem +4

    UN/AU: "You have the right to self-determination - as long as you choose the path we predetermined for you!"

  • @nicolasmkou3706
    @nicolasmkou3706 Před rokem +16

    Salutations depuis Mayotte Océan Indien
    Le combat pour Mayotte française n'a jamais été éthnique mais politique, souvent non violent mixte et égalitaire contre la bourgeoisie comorienne commerçante et esclavagiste, plus éduquée parfois de nationalité française
    Ce combat a été mené principalement par les femmes sur le terrain, les chatouilleuses de Mayotte dont Zaina Mdere , ces femmes et ces hommes qui ont lutté étaient originaires des autres îles aussi mais ils avaient en commun la famine spoliation de terres , la pauvreté et la discrimination.
    Cette bourgeoisie comorienne n'a jamais été tendre avec le petit peuple travailleur d'où qu'ils viennent dans l'archipel
    L'île de Mohéli continue d'être stigmatisée encore aujourd'hui par la discrimination faite par la caste politique consanguine comorienne il faut noté bien avant l'indépendance les dirigeants politiques mahorais milités pour un rapprochement entre Mayotte et Mohéli qui étaient les plus pauvres
    On pourrait distingué ces iles par organisation d'origine à Mayotte et Mohéli il existe une société matrilocale et parfois matrilinéaire ethniquement ils sont proches des malgaches de la côte ouest les Sakalava, en Grande Comore c'est aussi matrilocale ethniquement proche des tanzaniens , à l'île d'Anjouan il existe une ascendance avec Oman et l'Hadramaout il y a une société patriarcale et patrilineaire
    Mise à part c'est différences la base et bantoue, l'écart de développement existant déjà à l'époque de l'indépendance les Comores indépendantes avaient un PIB 5 fois plus haut que celui de Mayotte et c'est là bas que le peu de mahorais aller encore pour terminer leur études.
    Ce que peut être les gens pourraient vouloir savoir c'est que la caste des notables de grande Comore et la bourgeoisie de Anjouan ont collaboré comme fonctionnaire de l'état colonial
    Ils ont milités auprès du petit peuple pour l'indépendance tout en gardant eux même la nationalité française
    Les mahorais ont senti qu'il n' y aurait que peu de viabilité commune se sont retirés car c'était revenir sous le joug des anciens maîtres
    Pour ceux qui comprennent
    Le vote pour le RN/FN a été un message ciblé contre le gouvernement de Macron par les natifs,ils ont démontré qu'ils étaient encore chez eux, on ne peut continuer à les violentés et à spolier leurs terres impunément sans qu'il y ait de réponses alors qu'il existe un état de droit.
    Le ministre Darmanin ému ou non a donné à priori une réponse aux mahorais qui en tant que contribuables ont droit à la sécurité.
    Comme leurs aînés les mahorais ont été capables d'engeance politique
    Aujourd'hui l'intérêt pour un archipel uni politiquement ne sert que les intérêts des dirigeants politiques comoriens corrompus qui appauvrissent leur pays sans oublier qu'ils continuent de mener double jeu ils sont tous binationaux ou ont travaillé en tant que fonctionnaire ou militaire dans l'état français
    Les Comores indépendantes et les Comores francaise en tournant le dos à ces féodaux arriérés et en s'unissant pour prendre l'opportunité d'un monde qui change pourront développer la zone
    La place centrale que tient l'archipel dans l'océan Indien un aéroport International en Grande Comore deux ports en eaux profondes à Anjouan et à Mayotte,une diaspora mondiale éduquée polyglotte et avec des contacts ayant tout les moyens de devenir à l'exemple du Kenya du Rwanda un des prochains hub africain à l'image de Singapour
    Désolé de la longueur et de langue non maitrisée
    Bien à vous
    Merci

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +3

      Thank you so much for the extremely helpful comment. I really appreciated it. Unfortunately, there was a lot that I couldn't explain in the video, including the important role played by women in the MPM. So, thank you for explaining this. The situation in Mayotte is so interesting and important. I hope that I was able to provide an overview of a complex situation that many in the English-speaking world have never heard about.

  • @JamesKerLindsay
    @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +79

    This fascinating and important story has received surprisingly little international attention. But while most coverage has focused on the immigration issue, there’s been surprisingly little said about the broader issues of the partition of the Comoros, which has led to this crisis. But it does raise some important questions about self-determination in colonial situations. So, should France have held on to Mayotte? And should it continue to do so? As ever, I look forward to your thoughts and comments below.

    • @berkosmansatiroglu
      @berkosmansatiroglu Před rokem

      How about Sudan?

    • @user-eo4nx1wm7n
      @user-eo4nx1wm7n Před rokem

      Is this the same guy who accuses Italians of inhumane treatment of approximately 50000 illegal immigrants in just the first months of 2023?

    • @Also_sprach_Zarathustra.
      @Also_sprach_Zarathustra. Před rokem +12

      Mahorais choose to stay in France. Taking the local point of view, Comore is the colonial power in Mayotte, not France ...

    • @thomassenbart
      @thomassenbart Před rokem +2

      Subjugation, exploitation and perhaps humiliation certainly could be part of the colonial experience but of course all of these adjectives also describe the experience of all peoples under domestic/native rule. Also, previous to colonization most if not all of these territories were vastly less developed at every level and his is obvious given what has happened post colonization.

    • @anirudhparthasarathy3387
      @anirudhparthasarathy3387 Před rokem +4

      I would say France would hold on to Mayotte so long as the people there express their wish to stay as part of France. Personally, I see Mayotte same as Somme or the department of France I live in. It is unfortunate the UN saw it as blocking self determination till Mayotte voted to become part of France, even though the people of the island did exactly that, exercise their choice to retain their links to France. On that note, I am also against this operation which I see is largely for political optics and trying to pull back the voters of the Rassemblement national to the mainstream (I do not see an RN voter suddenly turn symathetic to Darmanin thanks to this, and I understand that his party is genuinely worried of a Le Pen presidency come next election since Macron is ineligible). There has to be an improved asylum process in Mayotte which gives possibillity of acquiring the papers (which under current circumstances in Mayotte is difficult to regularise).

  • @peterkops6431
    @peterkops6431 Před rokem +2

    Thanks Prof 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @greghavers821
    @greghavers821 Před rokem +2

    fascinating!! thanks for this!!!!

  • @dystar112
    @dystar112 Před rokem +4

    Writing an essay about this topic. This was interesting. Thank you 💥

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +2

      Great. I hope it helped. :-)

    • @dystar112
      @dystar112 Před rokem +2

      @@JamesKerLindsay it did thank you. Geography abd history are important and you gave us a comprehensive background in such a short time. Thanks 🌸

  • @BirdEgg123
    @BirdEgg123 Před rokem +3

    Fantastic overview, professor.

  • @kevkeary4700
    @kevkeary4700 Před rokem +3

    I never heard about Mayotte until now. Thank you.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      Thanks. Yes, it's an unusual one. It is remarkably little known, even compared to the other French overseas territories.

  • @shakiMiki
    @shakiMiki Před rokem +7

    Another revetting video about something getting little exposure elsewhere. Thank you.

  • @edgy_secular_memes367
    @edgy_secular_memes367 Před rokem +7

    I mean the people expressed their wishes in a free and fair vote and that deserves to be expected. So much for self-determination

  • @anirudhparthasarathy3387
    @anirudhparthasarathy3387 Před rokem +11

    Great video James, thanks for your perspective. Weighing in as French person here; I see Darmanin doing this largely to please the metropolitan French electorate, with the pull of the nationalist votes towards the far-right, an act in Mayotte is seen as an action taken against 'illegal immigration'. In addition to Comoros, Mayotte's own local leadership is against summary expulsions and I am worried about the increasingly hardline positions the ministry is taking under Darmanin, be it in Mayotte or Metropolitan France - when it came to handling the recent protests.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +5

      Thank you so much, Anirudh. I have to also thank you for kindly suggesting the idea in the first place. This has had no coverage at all in the Anglophone media! It has been completely missed.
      And, as always, I appreciate your extra perspective on this. It is interesting to hear that this has a domestic political component. I was actually struck by his much it echoes the small boats issue here in the U.K. It seems a lot if politicians are trying to make a name off the misery and desperation of migrants these days. Sad times.
      But, as you saw, I also thought it would be interesting to use this topic to highlight sone of the moral and political problems with the concept of self-determination in the process of decolonisation. It’s not perhaps quite as clear cut and straightforward as it might often seem.
      Again, my sincerest thanks for the really great suggestion!

    • @anirudhparthasarathy3387
      @anirudhparthasarathy3387 Před rokem +1

      @@JamesKerLindsay Good morning :) Thanks for the kind words and I am glad that I could be of helfp.
      I have been following the recent small boats rhetoric too and has disgusting rhetoric (got more information on it since I follow English football and the Gary Lineker saga that followed). Sad times indeed.
      It is true that self-determination is not that straightforward and a case in point of hasty decolonisation I see is that of Suriname - where no public opinion was sought.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      @@anirudhparthasarathy3387 Thanks, Anirudh. Yes, as I was working on it I kept thinking about the appalling situation in the U.K.

  • @amiruddinshahrulanuar8505
    @amiruddinshahrulanuar8505 Před 10 měsíci

    Thanks prof,👍

  • @AGS363
    @AGS363 Před rokem +38

    Ah, the right to self-determination!
    Simultaneous, one of the most abused and most ignored principles of international law.
    For Mayotte, the problem really boils down to this decision: What do you value more, the expressed will of the people or historical territorial claims?

    • @fandemusique4693
      @fandemusique4693 Před rokem

      Historical territorial claims that are non-sense as France owned Mayotte decades before the Comores.

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ Před rokem +3

      Mayotte voted to remain.

    • @AGS363
      @AGS363 Před rokem +3

      @@pierren___ Exactly.
      And the Union of the Comoros has historical territorial claims.

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ Před rokem

      @@AGS363 ? No since its not democratic. France should annex Comores.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem +1

      You can't arbitrarily divide colonies like that when you give them independence. Imagine if they did it too Algeria, what a mess.

  • @danwylie-sears1134
    @danwylie-sears1134 Před rokem +8

    As always, thank you for addressing these issues that otherwise get little or no attention in the US.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem

      Thanks a lot, Dan. It's so interesting to try to cover these little-known issues.

  • @cedric9292
    @cedric9292 Před rokem +1

    Keep going Sir. Your videos are very interesting and informatib.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem

      Thank you so much! I really appreciate the kind support.

  • @ptrappe
    @ptrappe Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thanks!

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před 10 měsíci

      Thank you so much! That was very kind of you and really appreciated. Very best regards, James

  • @salilbhatnagar
    @salilbhatnagar Před rokem +1

    very interesting

  • @LarzGustafsson
    @LarzGustafsson Před rokem +1

    Interesting clip anyway. Keep up the good work.

  • @UpliftedCapybara
    @UpliftedCapybara Před rokem +5

    Why was there such a massive disparity between the opinion of the other Comoros islands and Mayotte in regards to independence?

    • @nicolasmkou3706
      @nicolasmkou3706 Před rokem +4

      Peur de retourner sous les joug d'anciens maîtres, discrimination famine pauvreté à l'époque le PIB des Comores étaient 5 fois celui de Mayotte
      L'île de Mayotte et de Mohéli sont matrilocaux : spoliation des terres des notables et bourgeois comorien plus éduqués qui militaient pour l'indépendance tout en gardant la nationalité française
      La caste dominante n'a jamais été tendre avec le petit peuple travailleur comorien d'où qu'il vienne dans l'archipel , la société patriarcale d'instauration omanaise et Hadramaout était patriarcale et féodale, cela continue aujourd'hui d'où certains bloquages aujourd'hui
      Le mode peu decentralisé ne fonctionne pas
      Il faut noté que la constitution changé il ya peu permettait une présidence tour à tour de chaque pour l'union fédérale
      Quand ce fut le tour de Mayotte,tant de manigances ont fait qu'aucun candidats de Mayotte car il y en a eu quand même n'a été accepté,le tour est allé à une autre île
      Les politiciens voudraient que les comoriens non francais arrivent à Mayotte acquérir des papiers pour ensuite pouvoir aller en France continentale mais ne souhaitent la présidence des mahorais chez eux, ils refusent tout simplement, donc à vous de vous faire votre avis

    • @nicolasmkou3706
      @nicolasmkou3706 Před rokem +4

      L'esclavage interafricain a été aboli en 1841 à Mayotte
      Et environ 40 ans plus tard au Comores en 1912😢

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +3

      Great question. It seems like the French influence was rather greater there. It had been under French rule longer (though not significantly), and the capital had been based there. It is also probable that there was a higher French settler population.

  • @UNSKIALzPSN
    @UNSKIALzPSN Před rokem +2

    I had no idea about any of this! You set the context perfectly and explained the issue well. Learned a lot. Subbed :)

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      Thanks so much! And a very warm welcome to the channel. :-)

  • @NCOLON7545
    @NCOLON7545 Před rokem +1

    Fantastic job!!!

  • @fabs8498
    @fabs8498 Před rokem +15

    Ask to mahorais if it's a colonial power. They are french and nothing can change it.

  • @charliem5254
    @charliem5254 Před rokem +11

    Prof. Ker-Lindsay is doing such a great service in terms of news analysis, more academics need to be like him and really speak about their research to the lay person.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +4

      Thank you so much! I would love to see more academics do this. But it is difficult. It is very time consuming, and there is a steep learning curve. Also, and sadly, many are put off as they don’t want to face the abuse that can come with it. But I do certainly hope that others would give it a go. In fact, I learn so much from the channel. Lots of my ideas have evolved from discussions with viewers. And I’ve had so many great suggestions and tips for topics. Indeed, this one was a suggestion from a channel member.

  • @dfdla
    @dfdla Před rokem +5

    Mayotte wants to be French just as the Falklands wants to be British. No problem there. The problem comes when migrants unilaterally decide they will relocate into someone else's country without first complying with that country's immigration laws. Economic migration is a code term for people who screwed up their homeland and now want to barge in uninvited on someone else's better-managed territory. France is completely justified in sending these people back to where they came from. What is a human rights activist??? Everyone is for human rights. People who form a nation with a recognized international boundary and agree to live peacefully by a set of laws have rights too.

  • @stunimbus1543
    @stunimbus1543 Před rokem +5

    This touches on so much - irregular migration, the states from which the migrants came not accepting their citizens back as they have no documents, locals turning to the far right, a group of islands which both wants to be 1 country and 2 countries and who gets to decide. There's enough material for a whole series of videos here.

  • @neil4692
    @neil4692 Před rokem +4

    If they want to be part of France let them be a part of France it's not that complicated they have the right to decide the future of their island

  • @rejvaik00
    @rejvaik00 Před rokem +3

    I got to say this situation reminds me of Hong Kong in the 1960s everyone was protesting that Hong Kong should be returned to the Chinese and then in the 2020s everyone was protesting and holding the British flag saying please liberate us from the Chinese

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      Meanwhile in the UK bits and peaces also protest and seem to want out. Also in Spain and in Ukraine it caused a war. Funny, that.

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 Před rokem

      I don't think people in HK were ever enthusiastic about China. The 1997 handover actually caused a major flight of people as they were afraid the CCP would impose strict censorship on the next day.
      They didn't do it then, but surely are now.

    • @alaindumas1824
      @alaindumas1824 Před 10 měsíci +1

      The difference is that HK inhabitants did not get to vote on the territory's future.

  • @kocerarif
    @kocerarif Před rokem +5

    Turkey has more than 8 million assylum seekers from Syria and we don't know what to do with them.

    • @zebulonreynaud919
      @zebulonreynaud919 Před rokem

      France have more than 30% of the 0-4 year old population who is from african immigration, it's 25 000 000 peoples, it's enough !

    • @mou6854
      @mou6854 Před rokem +1

      integrate them like the millions of Turks who moved to western europe

    • @kocerarif
      @kocerarif Před rokem

      @@mou6854 What about moving them to Europe?

  • @yesid17
    @yesid17 Před rokem +3

    honestly.... this is an amazing video... thank you

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem

      So, you see! You jumped in to make a comment about me without watching the whole thing. Let that be a lesson! :-)

  • @Brommear
    @Brommear Před 10 měsíci +2

    Since a wall cannot be built around Mayotte, maybe a moat?

  • @Bb13190
    @Bb13190 Před rokem +6

    Very good video on the subject. It is good to see some objectivity, usually, when english speaking media or youtube channel talks about Mayotte, they forgot to mention that the people there voted repeatedly to stay French. Thanks
    And "fun" fact, Mayotte's maternity is the biggest in France, a lot of the migrant are pregnant woman who came to give birth in France.

    • @vermicelledecheval5219
      @vermicelledecheval5219 Před rokem +1

      The same within french Guyana, brazilian women give birth here so their progeny would benefit from good social medical care, although they are not particularly fond of France...

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      @@vermicelledecheval5219 did you ever try decolonize? No? Ah

    • @vermicelledecheval5219
      @vermicelledecheval5219 Před rokem

      @@FOLIPE Why you're not trying to do without molesting or massacre the native forest natives inhabitants then on your side ? One stupid assumption against another...

  • @accountforcommenting
    @accountforcommenting Před rokem +5

    Mayotte benefit being part of France, that is why people from Comoros is moving into mayotte

  • @STATERECALLMUSIC
    @STATERECALLMUSIC Před rokem +2

    I’m so glad I’ve found your channel! Subscribed!

  • @philjameson292
    @philjameson292 Před rokem +19

    Look to me that France is damned either way
    1. Retain Mayotte and deal with a refugee crisis plus anti-colonial criticism
    2. Withdraw and see Comoros in a war with Mayotte, again for which France will be criticised
    Ironically if the whole archipelago had remained a French colony then all of the people there would probably be having a far better standard of living and have no need to risk their lives as economic refugees

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ Před rokem +1

      We have to annex it all

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Před rokem

      Just grant all the migrants French citizenship. After that they'd have the right to migrate to Europe and not just to Metropolitan France but to any EU member.

    • @surprise_
      @surprise_ Před rokem

      The colonialism is a good thing.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem +1

      Their mistake was in the begining when they colonized it, then again when they divided it. Now it's the consequences of their past mistakes

    • @zebulonreynaud919
      @zebulonreynaud919 Před rokem

      @@seneca983 no. absolutely not. 30% of the 0-4 year old french population is now from african immigration, it destruct the social system of france, it's enough.

  • @louisxix3271
    @louisxix3271 Před rokem +10

    Fascinating video! I love how you always find interesting but little-talked about topics.
    As always, a morally murky situation. The plight of poverty stricken Comorans is pitiful, but I still don't think this is enough to justify violating Mahorais sovereignty and their desire for cultural preservation. It is the fault of the Comoran government that they are so poor, they have failed their citizens, so the impetus is on them to provide, not for France to play nice with illegal migration.

    • @simpmaster7995
      @simpmaster7995 Před rokem +5

      @@abaibrahim6709 It is upto the people of that small African Island to decide if they want to join China or not.

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 Před rokem +1

      ​@@abaibrahim6709 You keep pasting that comment everywhere as if it actually offered some interesting viewpoint. It doesn't. What the hell does it even have to do with the topic?

  • @monirothyou-bell5346
    @monirothyou-bell5346 Před rokem +7

    They wanted independence but go back to French territory because of their country mismanagement

  • @ericmaniraho2260
    @ericmaniraho2260 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Mahorais live better than comoros or madgascar. Free school, europeans pasports...as an african, i support their union with france.

  • @erenoz2910
    @erenoz2910 Před rokem +5

    Very interesting that the Maorais have chosen the FN. I doubt that they would be welcomed in mainland France among their fellow voter base.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem

      Indeed! You’re absolutely right. It is very interesting, isn’t it!?

    • @erenoz2910
      @erenoz2910 Před rokem

      @@JamesKerLindsay It really is. I wonder how the FN is planning to return the favor to Mayotte if they get elected. After all, it would be quite expensive for France to enforce immigration laws in such a far off territory.

  • @vinniechan
    @vinniechan Před rokem +4

    If the Island has voted repeatedly to remain part of France I don't see how it's the place of outsiders like the UN to tell them what to do
    Once you opt for independence you are responsible for your own development
    Can't have it both ways on one hand be independent and on the other expect French territory to take your migrants

    • @tosmodragoon
      @tosmodragoon Před rokem +2

      Exactly.
      The funniest the comorians leave their island to go live in France when they had the opportunity. A lot of them are french and ask Mayotte to be a part of Comoria country whereas they live in France currently.

  • @maxwilliam5240
    @maxwilliam5240 Před rokem +1

    This is new to me. Thanks for sharing

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      Thanks, Max. There’s been surprisingly little on it in the English-language media. But Mayotte is certainly a fascinating territory, isn’t it?

  • @michealoflaherty1265
    @michealoflaherty1265 Před rokem +1

    Great video. Thanks. Pretty much all of it was news to me. Not dissimilar to Northern Ireland.

    • @Bb13190
      @Bb13190 Před rokem +5

      Yes, very dissimilar to Northen Ireland. In NI, the people who voted to remain in the UK were descendant of british settlers sent them to colonize Ireland.
      In Mayotte, there were very few french settler and the people who voted to remains in France were the native people.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      ​​@@Bb13190 Who voted in northern Ireland? And why weren't the French in Oran and Algiers given a chance to remain in France without Algerian autonomy if the 1961 referendum lost there?

  • @ebatadesse9703
    @ebatadesse9703 Před rokem +8

    This is actually the one time, I can't blame a colonial power. not to mention the fact that its the choice of The Mayotte's, they are economically well off than the Comoros islands. So much so, that ,it seems even the Comorians flee their own country.
    The interesting part is, What is the Comoros government proposing ? give us back Mayotte and let us be poor together? imagine that!!😏 First improve the lives of people you are governing before having any territorial ambitions.
    What makes more sense here is if Comoros people want the Mayotte life so much they should hold a referendum to join Mayotte.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      It really is an interesting case, isn’t it!? I can see both dudes of the argument. And it is impossible for anyone reasonable to be absolutist on this. I suspect that the side that really most unhappy about it all is in fact France.

    • @tosmodragoon
      @tosmodragoon Před rokem +4

      Yes Comorians leave their country to live in France. Their are more comorians in Marseille than in the capital of Comoros. In Mayotte, a teacher without experience earn 2900 euros/mouth against 50euros/mouth in Comoros.

  • @azurejester1520
    @azurejester1520 Před rokem +1

    Always fascinating

  • @EuroMaidanWasAnInsurrection

    Hey Professor. I found the term i was looking for to describe my position. "Egalitarian Self Determination." Or "Absolute Self Determination". Do you have any thoughts on this concept? Do you know anyone who currently advocates for it. Seems like Ghandi, Mandela, Woodrow Wilson, and others did but they are not around anymore. I view Absolute self determination supersedes territorial integrity. International law disagrees. So im looking for notable intellectuals advocating for this.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      Thanks, Drew. There was time when the idea of a general principle of self-determination was seen in more vegetal terms than today. But while a nice idea, it was completely impractical. Ethnic groups don’t fall into neat areas. They often overlap. How do we decide which group gets what territory. And do we condone forced population transfers. And then there is the question of which groups qualify? When is a group too small for self-determination? We actually cover this in the book global.oup.com/academic/product/secession-and-state-creation-9780190494049?cc=cy&lang=en

    • @EuroMaidanWasAnInsurrection
      @EuroMaidanWasAnInsurrection Před rokem +1

      @@JamesKerLindsay I would argue we have current boundaries that can be used as a baseline. However I look at them more organically, moldable and ever changing. Here in America we have 50 state. In my state of Pennsylvania we have 67 individual counties. We could allow Pennsylvanians to vote in a referendum on union or independence from America. If hypothetically it was successful I would argue Pennsylvania would have the right to reapply back to America if it wanted. Similar to how I would argue UK could reapply back to the EU in terms of customs union. If Pennsylvania elected to leave and not rejoin America. I would argue the 67 individual counties could vote in their own referendum on independence from Pennsylvania or maintain their union. I do believe city state is the lowest level I personally would advocate (Rome, Singapore, Monaco) for but we do have Amish communities here and it would be hard for me to argue their community should not have that right. I would absolutely not be in favor of any forced removal. People would have the option to immigrate/move to another area if they so wished as I believe in international free travel and not locking your citizens inside because you suck as a leader lol (Cough DPRK Cough). From my understanding egalitarian self determination recognizes the inherent value of human rights, equality, and inclusivity. It goes beyond merely allowing for self determination based on ethnic, national, or religious grounds. I would not tie it to religion, ethnic make up, culture, etc. It could be a completely random group if they are centrally located and universal suffrage vote for it in a democratic credible way. While I understand the practicality of it could/would be a mess and we can joke about it. However I believe this view is the most justified position one could have if were being fair to everyone. I did buy your book already.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem

      Thanks, Drew - on all counts! :-) I can see the argument on territorial grounds. However, the US is a rather special case. In most places, the decision would inevitably be centred on ethno-national criteria. And it is also worth worth remembering that states don’t like to give up territory, for a variety of reasons. This could be on economic grounds. It could also be from a fear that if one area goes then others will follow. And I’m not sure that this would be good for international peace and stability. Can you imagine a UN made up of 1000 or 10,000 members? The international system would become dangerously chaotic.

    • @EuroMaidanWasAnInsurrection
      @EuroMaidanWasAnInsurrection Před rokem

      @@JamesKerLindsay For sure. I'm ok with it being based on ethno-national criteria. South Korea and Japan basically are. Its not how I would build a state but I understand that mindset. I understand it would basically shatter global boundaries overnight if adopted. I really don't like this mindset countries have of "You are part of us no matter how you feel" to every part of their country. Does it really come down to might makes right + multilateral military alliances + we establish world order (ex UNSC) On the UN. The size is not my concern. Organization are organizations and they will find a way to operate. It's the structure and ability for a few countries from UK, Russia and us Americans and others to dictate world order in the UN that I don't find egalitarian. How about no permanent members.

  • @asterixky
    @asterixky Před rokem +5

    Comoros GDP $1,600 vs Mayotte $10,000, with the possibility to move to France and work everywhere in the EU? Off course they want to stay French.

  • @JTA1961
    @JTA1961 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Rather than all those other islands raising themselves up it's easier to "bail"

  • @blava3155
    @blava3155 Před rokem +5

    The Comoros president really said that Mayotte should become part of his country when hundreds of thousands from his country are leaving to Mayotte SMH

    • @rosee2416
      @rosee2416 Před rokem +1

      The comorian president is a liar

  • @margarethung9398
    @margarethung9398 Před rokem +3

    I'd never heard of Mayotte before, so thank you for this. Unlike the Chagos Archipelago situation, where almost everyone agrees that the Chagossians have right on their side, I have sympathies with all sides of this dispute. They all have valid, understandable points of view. How on earth will it be resolved.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      Thank you so much, Margaret. It is such a little-known situation. But you are absolutely correct. It is a fascinating case precisely because it forces us to confront a complex ambiguity about decolonisation and self-determination. We are used to believing that when it comes to decolonisation things are very straightforward. But this does raise some really difficult and uncomfortable questions. And, like you, I have very little idea how it can be resolved. I suspect it won't. Comoros will continue to claim it (knowing that the inhabitants don't want to be part of the country), and France will continue to claim it (but may well regret it).

    • @0816M3RC
      @0816M3RC Před rokem +2

      It was resolved. The people of Mayotte chose to remain a part of France.

    • @TheLocalLt
      @TheLocalLt Před 11 měsíci

      The Diego Garcia situation is also much oversimplified, although is obviously still far more morally ambiguous than Mayotte.

  • @davidsawyer1599
    @davidsawyer1599 Před 10 měsíci +1

    This is one of the most puzzling things to me. Any former colony. Be it France's or any other. The colonist are ordered to return the colony to the population. Fair enough. The population has observed what it takes to be successful for hundreds of years. The population is all for having their freedom. They are very happy the colonists are leaving. The colonists leave. The population waste no time in dismantling the system that worked for centuries. Shortly there after chaos ensues. The population doesn't quite grasp where they went wrong. So what do they do? They flee to their former oppressors/colonists. One sees this time and time again. The only former colony I can think of that has made the transition with any success is Canada. Like I said it puzzles me.

  • @IapetusStag
    @IapetusStag Před 10 měsíci +1

    French Guyana wanting to become part of France is a blessing for Space Exploration:
    The European Space Agency (ESA) launches their rockets in Korou, French Guyana because it is closer to the equator and space rockets launch better near the equator because it takes advantage of the Earth's faster spin at the equator. It's a win-win situation for ESA, Cayenne and the whole world. We get great Space Exploration, while F Guyana gets paid.

  • @TheLocalLt
    @TheLocalLt Před 11 měsíci +3

    Finally back to business as usual, will be taking a look at your last few videos over the next few days; thank you for highlighting this issue! It has gotten relatively little play outside of France-based media outlets.
    I think in this case the situation on the ground, both in Comoros and Mayotte, as well as the other nearby French possessions, speaks for itself pretty clearly in this case.
    To me, this is yet another example of where this anti-Western sentiment has crept further and further into international institutions (some of it cheered on by factions in the West).
    In this case, the series of inflammatory actions (or lack thereof) by the Comoros government are ignored by such institutions (especially of course the African Union as you noted), while the wishes of the inhabitants of Mayotte, which had been an independent island previous to its combination by the French into a typical “supercolony” with the other Comoros islands.
    Although the case overall is clearly far more morally ambiguous, I feel much the same way about is the international community has ignored the actions (or lack thereof) of the Mauritius government over the last five decades towards the Chagos population, who live in abject squalor, compared to the level of criticism focused on Britain and America for their own unsavory actions decades ago.
    I feel we need to be very careful in this new Cold War setting about not letting anti-Western forces set the narrative and gain a propaganda edge; we need to speak clearly when the situation dictates we do so. Even on Ukraine, you’ve rarely heard Western leaders say that the goal in Ukraine is expulsion of all Russian troops and the restoration of pre-2014 borders. This lack of Western pushback, and even accedence at times, has allowed, for example:
    - the World Health Organization (and it’s Beijing-backed chief secretary) to spread Beijing’s propaganda on an official WHO platform
    - the UN Committee on Decolonization to come under the influence of anti-Western powers and enact unenforceable rulings for propaganda purposes
    - there are of course a host of other examples
    Well I’ve gone on too long already so I’ll end it there, but thank you for bringing an unbiased view to a situation that is immensely complex yet has been twisted by some, including international institutions, to fit an anti-Western narrative - your channel is such a great public resource for exactly this reason.
    Can’t wait to watch your other recent videos, cheers!

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Thanks as ever LocalLt. I would look agree. I don’t believe in making false equivalences in the name of balance. I’m getting this a lot on my latest video on Moldova and Gagauzia. I will happily criticise Western wrongdoing when appropriate. But I’m not going to start playing the ‘they’re as bad as each other’ narrative. That said, we do need to make sure that we question Western actions when and where appropriate.
      But as this video showed, even in supposedly clear cut cases of colonialism, there are interesting moral and political ambiguities at play.

    • @TheLocalLt
      @TheLocalLt Před 11 měsíci

      @@JamesKerLindsay Oh yes I very much appreciate your neutrality on these videos - I think that’s the reason I find the reporting quoting the African Union’s take on the Mayotte crisis (particularly by many American news sources, some of which slapped anti-Western headlines on an Associated Press story that was actually fairly benign) to be so frustrating and concerning.

  • @tosmodragoon
    @tosmodragoon Před rokem +10

    The French have put an end to Arab-Muslim slavery on our island of lagoons. France protected us from the Malagasy razias and protected us from the Comorian brothers who killed us. France gave us shoes and allowed us to have beautiful houses by replacing them with our old houses made of earth. This is why France will always be at home in Mayotte! France has all the recognition of the Mahorais. Long live France ! 🇨🇵

    • @Diegomax22
      @Diegomax22 Před rokem +3

      Vive la France ❤️🇫🇷🇫🇷❤️
      À nos frères mahorais !

  • @lukejohn6139
    @lukejohn6139 Před rokem +12

    Couldn't help being reminded of Australia's half -arsed Christmas Island solution to illegal immigration. Truthfully Im not sure there is a 'good' solution to these problems while there is such wealth disparity on the planet.
    Such an interesting and thoughtful video as always professor, thank you.

    • @slimdiddyd
      @slimdiddyd Před rokem +2

      The solution is that rich countries have the right to deny immigrants if they choose. People who try immigrate illegally should be treated as invaders, and dealt with via lethal force.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      Thanks so much, Luke. Yes, there are all sorts of interesting parallels with other cases. I was reminded of the appalling discussion here in the UK at the moment about small boats crossing the Channel.

    • @0816M3RC
      @0816M3RC Před rokem

      ​@@slimdiddyd They should definitely be returned to their country of origin.

    • @nextinstitute7824
      @nextinstitute7824 Před 11 měsíci

      @@slimdiddyd Excuse me, but it aren't only 'rich countries' that don't allow immigrants. As a matter of fact, many Asian countries do-rich or poor. In many Asian countries immigrants cannot own property, even after a 30-year residency. Foreigners have few rights and can be kicked out at any time.

    • @nextinstitute7824
      @nextinstitute7824 Před 11 měsíci

      @@slimdiddyd In that case most US citizens should be kicked out of North America and back to England where they belong, many Brits who have invaded parts of Europe by buying holiday homes and deciding to stay should return to good old England as soon as possible. It's a double standard you are holding.

  • @PAVANZYL
    @PAVANZYL Před 10 měsíci +1

    Why should the issue of self determination be overruled by the issue of unity? What about the self determination of, for example, the Falkland Island?

  • @Amitiel-dz2hu
    @Amitiel-dz2hu Před rokem +2

    La population de Mayotte à fait son choix, je pense que ce choix doit être respecter. On ne peut pas forcer la population à rejoindre un Etat qu'il ne souhaite pas. C'est à l'ONU de comprendre !

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem

      Yes, but there is also the principle that colonial territories should not be partitioned. But I accept that it is not as straightforward as either side of the debate presents it.

  • @yggtor3961
    @yggtor3961 Před rokem +6

    Mayotte wasn't colonized by France. It was bough before the colonisation to the Comore. After the referendum mayotte choose to remain link to France. Nothing to do with colonisation there. The problem is with the comore. They wanted to be free from France.. but then choose to send their population in Mayotte because of economic problems.

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem +1

      No, by any understanding of the term, it was colonisation. And it has been clearly defined as much by the United Nations.

    • @yggtor3961
      @yggtor3961 Před rokem +3

      @@JamesKerLindsay The people in mayotte do not think the same. But i guess they do not matter when some people have something to say.

  • @izzatfauzimustafa6535
    @izzatfauzimustafa6535 Před rokem +7

    Maybe if the Comoros govt stop using Mayotte as an easy excuse to distract ppl from its own political and economical issues, then things would have been less complicated for Comoros, Metropolitan France and Mayotte relations. There's no point for Comoros to be bitter towards Mayotte and Metropolitan France, when so many opportunities to develop and stabilise Comoros since 1974 have been sidelined by their own politicians because they prioritize unproductive cronyism instead.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem +1

      Solutions that are based on humans not being humans are not solutions. Of course Comoros would be aggrieved and this would cause tensions with them. Just as it's obvious the difference between a sponsored bit of France and a poor africa country would cause migration issues with bad integration since it's far from mainland France. It's all really not rocket science, but sure, if people became angels it'd not be a problem. If only...

  • @scarletcrusade77
    @scarletcrusade77 Před rokem +12

    Wait so let me get this straight the people from Comoros want to go to Mayotte because its richer than their islands because its under French control but at the same time want the island to be owned by them? Wouldn't that make the island poorer under their control and the people who wanted to leave to the French controlled island probably would want to go elsewhere to migrate?

    • @randomguy6152
      @randomguy6152 Před rokem

      no it means France can support the island more making it a massive tourist location and favourable vacation place for French

    • @scarletcrusade77
      @scarletcrusade77 Před rokem +7

      @@randomguy6152 Why would France support an ex colony which does nothing for them and have actually demanded land that doesn't even want to go to them to begin with?

    • @randomguy6152
      @randomguy6152 Před rokem

      @@scarletcrusade77 the colony can be good for tourism which is very profitable if France invest into them

    • @scarletcrusade77
      @scarletcrusade77 Před rokem +8

      @@randomguy6152 That makes 0 sense. Why would France who hypothetically could lose their island to Comoros invest into their country for their own tourism? They wouldn't. In fact they'd likely pull all investments from that region since its one of the least tourist visited areas in the world. Let the island fall into poverty under their new African rulers and see how they like it.

    • @zebulonreynaud919
      @zebulonreynaud919 Před rokem

      IT WOULD 100%

  • @khanhnguyen-tt3ff
    @khanhnguyen-tt3ff Před rokem +3

    As they said it better to be a pheonix tail then a chicken head.

  • @mayotteinfo
    @mayotteinfo Před rokem +5

    Mayotte 🇨🇵

  • @amstatistic5603
    @amstatistic5603 Před 9 měsíci +1

    99.4% its a clear unity. The will of the people is the only thing that matters

  • @danielpeter3834
    @danielpeter3834 Před rokem +6

    Well if the island gets back into Comoros, they will get poverty rates that the original inhabitants would want to migrate to France.
    And that's a bigger problem...

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ Před rokem +1

      Give all to France

    • @fabs8498
      @fabs8498 Před rokem +1

      And some comorians are living in France and are french.

  • @Leiwanderer
    @Leiwanderer Před rokem +3

    While I would say that partitioning a territory that is being decolonised is wrong in general (Northern Ireland and Ceuta & Melilla were just scummy cases of gerrymandering), I think this case is special. I think that since it is a geographically distinct, relatively large part of the territory, with almost unanimous support for remaining with France, an exception should be made here.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem +2

      Ceuta and Melilla weren't colonies, unlike this case. This case to me is the worst because of how arbitrary it is. They couldn't and wouldn't apply this nonsense in Ireland or Algeria because imagine the Holy Roman Empire level of borders if each city or town got to chose it's own afilliation. The fact that you are separating an archipelago instead of an island makes it less worse, perhaps, in practical ways, but the fundamental principle is the same, and in practical terms you see how well its working for them

    • @JohnSmith-sl2qc
      @JohnSmith-sl2qc Před rokem +2

      ​@F. OPE no it isn't. Mayotte is a geographically distinct island that became French even before the comoros existed

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      ​@@JohnSmith-sl2qc It is a part of the same archipelago and it was a part of the colony of Comoros at the time of the referendum, which happened in ALL of Comoros. That's all there is to it, really. The rest is people trying to spin half truths

    • @JohnSmith-sl2qc
      @JohnSmith-sl2qc Před rokem +1

      @@FOLIPE So each and every Andaman island should be independent according to your logic

    • @JohnSmith-sl2qc
      @JohnSmith-sl2qc Před rokem

      @@FOLIPE this is legit bait

  • @falconking8294
    @falconking8294 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Their will to remain french should be respected by everyone, the Comoros government not even wanting back their own citizens is messed up, I wouldn't blame the Comoros citizens if they ever wanted to join France in exchange for a stable politic and better living standard😟

    • @modo1896
      @modo1896 Před 7 měsíci

      It was already tried. In 1997, 2 of the 3 islands that make up the Union of the Comoros seceded from the country. The islands of Anjouan and Mohéli declared independence and Anjouan even held an independence referrendum with around 99% in favor. After declaring independence, Anjouan requested to rejoin France. France refused. Those two islands ended up being reclaimed as part of the Comoros and they remain part of the Union of the Comoros to this day.

  • @mrsporty9669
    @mrsporty9669 Před rokem +3

    In comparison, some parts of Ukraine have voted to join Russia

    • @mou6854
      @mou6854 Před rokem +4

      Yea under guns and a illegally invasion not the greatest comparison

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem

      @@mou6854 Colonization is a legal invasion?

    • @Kannot2023
      @Kannot2023 Před rokem +1

      Unlike Russia, France protects its citizens regardless of skin color or religion. Russian army flatten all the block houses from separatist regions. I am curious if the people from Donbas will vote for Russia again.

  • @FlamingBasketballClub
    @FlamingBasketballClub Před rokem +4

    The islanders chose to be a part of France due to economic/political incentives.

  • @sosammathomas1525
    @sosammathomas1525 Před 10 měsíci

    Do not let anybody cross illegally. Turn back them.

  • @mrniceguy7168
    @mrniceguy7168 Před rokem +4

    I’m pretty well informed on international politics and I had no idea Mayotte existed before this video

    • @JamesKerLindsay
      @JamesKerLindsay  Před rokem

      Thanks. I don't think many people outside of France and the Comoros did. It really is a fascinating story, and yet it is barely known.

  • @zealmediaproductions844
    @zealmediaproductions844 Před 10 měsíci

    What is the ethnic make up of mayotte ?

  • @ryan0the0robb
    @ryan0the0robb Před rokem +1

    Part of the issue is individuals acting as smugglers are bringing the people to mayotte. Well, if you want something to not be done, you have to make it undesirable. I would return amy caught migrant boat to the nearest island then confiscate the boat. Further tho people only take extreme action to leave home if home is hell. Maybe an international aid regimen organized by france would help slow the tide.

  • @DylanRoberts7
    @DylanRoberts7 Před rokem +3

    Great breakdown. I can understand both sides of the situation from Comoros wanting the island 'returned back' to them and to the Mayotte's right to self determination to remain apart of France proper. I do think it's important to relinquish control of previous colonial holdings but I also think the right to self determination exceeds that in importance. I also think any decisions regarding the right to self determination should be voted on and the threshold should not be a simple majority of 50% but instead a far safer super majority which in my personal opinion I think should require around 2/3 of the population.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem +1

      Self-determination doesn't trump territorial integrity. The US would never allow it in a part of itself, neither would France in it's mainland. Why should Comoros and other african countries? Just because europe gets to tell them, that's why

    • @markv1974
      @markv1974 Před rokem +1

      @@FOLIPEbecause there was ni comoros before france. Theyre separate kingdoms ruled by different sultans. Since there was no common state then there is no violation of territorial integrity.. the scenario youre presenting is like if russia conquered ukraine and merged it with belarus calling it belakraine.. after a few decades russia sets belakraine free but your’re forcing the ukrainians to stay in union with belarus against their will.

    • @tosmodragoon
      @tosmodragoon Před rokem

      The French have put an end to Arab-Muslim slavery on our island of lagoons. France protected us from the Malagasy razias and protected us from the Comorian brothers who killed us. France gave us shoes and allowed us to have beautiful houses by replacing them with our old houses made of earth. This is why France will always be at home in Mayotte! France has all the recognition of the Mahorais. Long live France ! 🇨🇵

  • @sidneyadnopoz3427
    @sidneyadnopoz3427 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Stay strong France 🇫🇷

  • @sg_hokkien_opera
    @sg_hokkien_opera Před rokem +5

    0:21 different cultures. Western countries that try to clamp down on illegal immigrants are routinely accused of violating the human rights of the illegals. We don’t hear about such rights in other continents like Asia and Africa when countries take strong actions to protect their borders.

  • @yabu8523
    @yabu8523 Před rokem

    Why are there no Polish subtitles?
    While Google Translate works, it does make mistakes.

  • @payamanexclusive169
    @payamanexclusive169 Před rokem +4

    No. I would not want to become poorer.

  • @TheRealBozz
    @TheRealBozz Před rokem

    We are still animals. It's disappointing.

  • @ironlionzion5745
    @ironlionzion5745 Před 11 měsíci

    What status does St Pierre and Miquelon have?

    • @alaindumas1824
      @alaindumas1824 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Collectivite d'Outre-Mer, i.e. fiscal autonomy unlike a Departement like Mayotte.

  • @rms7999
    @rms7999 Před 7 měsíci +1

    France forever!