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Stealing a Nation

2004 56m Documentary List
Tomatometer 0 Reviews 84% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
During the 1960s and 1970s, the British and American governments tricked and expelled the native population of the Chagos Islands so America could build a major military base.

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member Documentary recounting the displacement of the Chagos people for British-US military strategic purposes. SHAMEFUL! Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/13/23 Full Review Audience Member More Pilger. This film's about the brutal Anglo-American eviction of the Chagos islanders, shipped off to slums in a foriegn land so that the Brits could make a present of their former home to the yanks, for use an airbase. Just watch it - it provides a valuable insight, for anyone still in any doubt whatsoever, into the ruthlessly cynical and vicious mindset of those in government who presume theirs is a position of power, rather than servitude. As usual, Pilger manages to interview some of the world's more loathesome politicians, and by being polite to them allows them to demonstrate to the world just how shamelessly bent they really are. The little grins which flicker across their mouths as they dissemble tells us far more about the way the world works than any amount of measured, dispassionate, well-researched factual exposition, though there's plenty of that too. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/12/23 Full Review Audience Member This film shows exactly what the title says. The US and British governments blatantly stole an island from its people and displaced them from their homeland back in the 1960's so that they could develop one of the largest military bases in the world. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/03/23 Full Review Audience Member The world needs this man so badly. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/19/23 Full Review Audience Member An emotive expose of the continuation of empire and ethnic cleansing by royal decree... Award-winning Australian journalist John Pilger and documentary filmmaker Christopher Martin (“Breaking the Silence” & “Palestine is Still the Issue”) reteam for this shocking expose of the British Governments expulsion of the people of the Chagos Islands and the undemocratic means used to do it, which won an RTS Television Award. Between 1967 and 1973 some 2,000 British subjects native to the Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean were forcibly expelled bythe British government from their idyllic island home, which was subsequently leased to the US as a military base, and resettled in appalling conditions some 1,000 miles away in Mauritius where they continue to live in poverty to this day. John Pilger frames the film in suitably dour form and truly shines when going head-to-head with seemingly deranged former US Defence Secretary James Schlesinger, who comes of particularly badly, while kudos goes to former President of Mauritius Cassam Uteem who leads the rally for the Chagossians at the head of a bevy of lawyers and academics who shed light on the betrayal. Leader of the Chagos Refugees Group Olivier Bancoult comes out fighting and he’s brought his mother with him as the Chagossians eloquently and emotively put the case in a series of reminiscences from the elderly exiles who are leading the fight for their return and some beautiful folk songs which speak to the sadness of their current exile. British television director Sean Crotty (“Tonight with Trevor McDonald”) also joins the team to produce some nicely done reconstructions which coupled with interviews, archive footage and documents open up a whole new side to the story and reveal a sinister and disturbing relic of feudalism at the heart of the Mother of Parliaments. The filmmakers have put together a fairly simplistic package which for the most part cleverly leaves it to the talking heads of the exiled Chagossians themselves to relate the whole sorry history of the squalid story of their forcible expulsion and the appalling after effects of poverty, sadness and death which it has left them with in this compelling little film. “Help me my friend, help me to sing. To send our message to the world.” Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/16/23 Full Review Audience Member An amazing documentary that highlights the brutal imperialist forces in play, namely the U.K. and U.S. This film made me shed tears of anger and disbelief at the utter contempt. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/26/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Stealing a Nation

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Movie Info

Synopsis During the 1960s and 1970s, the British and American governments tricked and expelled the native population of the Chagos Islands so America could build a major military base.
Director
John Pilger
Screenwriter
John Pilger
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Runtime
56m