UNITED NATIONS LIST OF NON-SELF-GOVERNING TERRITORIES

Map of the countries in the UN list:

The United Nations maintains a list of territories that do not govern themselves. The list was initially prepared in 1946 pursuant to Article XI of the United Nations Charter, and has been updated since then by the General Assembly on recommendation of the Special Committee on Decolonization and its predecessors. This list is called the 'United Nations list of Non-Self-Governing Territories'. Only permanently inhabited territories are considered for inclusion in this list.

Contents
History
Criticism
The list
Africa
Americas
Europe
Oceania
Former entries
Change of status
Independence
Sources
See also
External links

History


The list is one that draws its origins from the period of colonialism and the Charter's concept of non-self-governing territories. Thus, Western Sahara is included not solely on the grounds that it is under Moroccan occupation (and seen by Morocco as an integral part of the Kingdom) but also because it was a former Spanish colony. The same can be said about the situation of Namibia (removed upon its independence in 1990), which was seen, due to its former status as a mandate territory, as a vestige of German colonial legacy in Africa. A set of criteria for determining whether a territory is to be considered "non-self-governing" was established in General Assembly Resolution 1541 (XV) of 1960. This criterion has faced criticism from many activists, most notable of which are pro-Tibetan activists.
Also in 1960, the General Assembly adopted Resolution 1514 (XV), promulgating the "Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples", which declared that all remaining non-self-governing territories and trust territories were entitled to self-determination and independence. The following year, the General Assembly established the Special Committee on the Situation with Regard to the Implementation of the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples (sometimes referred to as the Special Committee on Decolonization, or the "Committee of 24" because for much of its history the committee was composed of 24 members), which generally reviews the situation in each non-self-governing territory each year and reports to the General Assembly.

Criticism


The list, however, remains controversial. One reason for this is the fact that it includes many dependencies that, many contend, have democratically elected to maintain their territorial status, and rejected independence (or in some cases the parent state periodically organizes referendums, as in the United States Virgin Islands, but there is insufficient voter interest), while other non-self-determining areas (most of the French overseas territories) are excluded. Another is that a number of the listed territories, such as Bermuda, also consider themselves completely autonomous and self-governing, with the "administering Power" retaining a limited number of responsibilities such as defence and diplomacy. On the other hand, other territories that have achieved a status described by the administering countries as internally self-governing—such as Puerto Rico, the Netherlands Antilles and the Cook Islands—have been removed from the list by vote of the General Assembly. In 1972, Hong Kong (then administered by the United Kingdom) and Macao (then administered by Portugal) were removed from the list at the request of the People's Republic of China, which had just been recognized as holding China's seat at the United Nations. Many critics charge the Committee that drafts this list of using it as a largely political instrument.
Some territories that have been annexed and incorporated into the legal framework of the controlling state (such as the overseas departments of France) are considered by the UN to have been decolonized, since they then no longer constitute "non-self-governing" entities, but rather their populations are assumed to have agreed to merge with their former parent state. However, in 1961, the General Assembly voted to no longer accord this treatment to the then-"overseas provinces" of Portugal such as Angola and Mozambique, which were an active focus of United Nations attention until they attained independence in the mid-1970s.
On December 2 1986, New Caledonia, then a ''territoire d'outre-mer'', was reinstated on the list of non-self-governing territories, a step that caused protest from France. New Caledonia is the only French-administered territory presently on the list, although it has been enjoying the status of a ''collectivité sui generis'' since 1999 and its Territorial Congress holds the right, since the 1998 Nouméa Accord, to call for a referendum on independence after 2014.

The list


Africa


St. Helena and Dependencies (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)

Western Sahara (most of territory occupied by Morocco, the rest administered by the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic; see also foreign relations of Western Sahara)
Americas


Anguilla (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)

Bermuda (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)

British Virgin Islands (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)

Cayman Islands (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)

Falkland Islands (Malvinas) (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom; claimed by Argentina)

Montserrat (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)

Turks and Caicos Islands (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)

United States Virgin Islands (an organized unincorporated territory of the United States)
Europe


Gibraltar (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom; claimed by Spain) In a referendum held in 2002, voters in Gibraltar rejected shared sovereignty over the territory by the UK and Spain, with 99.5% voting against.
Oceania


American Samoa (an unorganized unincorporated territory of the United States)

Guam (an organized unincorporated territory of the United States)

New Caledonia (an overseas territory of France)

Pitcairn Islands (an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)

Tokelau (a dependency of New Zealand)

Former entries


The following territories have all been on the List of Non-Self-Governing Territories in the past. The date, former administering/colonial power (where not obvious from the name), and reason for removal from the List are given for each.
Change of status


Alaska, 1959, on obtaining statehood within the United States

Cocos (Keeling) Islands (Australia), 1984, on change of status

Cook Islands (New Zealand), 1965, on change of status

French Establishments in India, 1947, on change of status (now part of India)

★ French Establishments in Oceania, 1947, on change of status (now known as French Polynesia and Wallis and Futuna Islands; New Caledonia subsequently restored to list)

French Guiana, 1947, on change of status

Goa and dependencies (Portugal), 1961, in response to the invasion of India (now part of India)

Greenland (Denmark), 1954, on change of status

Guadeloupe and Dependencies (France), 1947, on change of status

Hawaii, 1959, on obtaining statehood within the United States

Hong Kong (United Kingdom), 1972, on change of status (returned to People's Republic of China peacefully and successfully in 1997)

Ifni (Spain), 1969, on change of status (now part of Morocco)

Macau (Portugal), 1972, on change of status (returned to People's Republic of China peacefully and successfully in 1999)

Martinique (France), 1947, on change of status

Netherlands Antilles, 1953, on change of status

Niue (New Zealand), 1974, on change of status

Northern Mariana Islands (United States), 1990, change of status in recognition of Commonwealth status

Panama Canal Zone (United States), 1947, on change of status (Panama requested that Canal Zone be removed from the list; now part of Panama)

Puerto Rico (United States), 1953, on change of status

Réunion (France), 1947, on change of status

São João Baptista de Ajudá (Portugal), 1961, on change of status (now part of Benin)

Saint Pierre et Miquelon (France), 1947, on change of status

Surinam (Netherlands), 1953, on change of status (now independent as Suriname)
Independence


Aden Colony and Protectorate, 1967, on independence from the United Kingdom as South Yemen (now part of Yemen)

Angola, 1975, on independence from Portugal

Antigua and Barbuda, 1981, on independence from the United Kingdom

Bahamas, 1973, on independence from the United Kingdom

Barbados, 1966, on independence from the United Kingdom

Basutoland, 1966, on independence from the United Kingdom as Lesotho

Bechuanaland, 1966, on independence from the United Kingdom as Botswana

Belgian Congo, 1960, on independence from Belgium (now Democratic Republic of the Congo)

British Guiana, 1966, on independence from the United Kingdom as Guyana

British Honduras, 1981, on independence from the United Kingdom as Belize

British Somaliland, 1960, on independence from the United Kingdom as part of Somalia

British Togoland, 1961, on independence from the United Kingdom as part of Ghana

Brunei, 1984, on independence from the United Kingdom (now known in the United Nations as Brunei Darussalam)

Cambodia, formerly part of French Indo-China, 1953, on independence from France

Cameroons French Trust Territory, 1960, on independence from France as Cameroon

Cameroons British Trust Territory, 1961, on merger with Nigeria and Cameroon

Cape Verde, 1975, on independence from Portugal

Comores, 1975, on independence from France

Congo, 1960, on independence from France

Cyprus, 1960, on independence from the United Kingdom

Dominica, 1978, on independence from the United Kingdom

East Timor, May 20 2002, on independence from Indonesia (now known in the United Nations as Timor-Leste)

Ellice Islands formerly part of Gilbert & Ellice Islands Colony, 1978, on independence from the United Kingdom as Tuvalu

Fernando Poo and Río Muni, formerly known as Spanish Guinea, 1968, on independence from Spain as Equatorial Guinea

Fiji Islands, 1970, on independence from the United Kingdom

French Equatorial Africa, 1960, on independence from France as Chad and Gabon

★ French Niger, 1960, on independence from France as Niger, Senegal and Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso)

French Somaliland, also known as French Territory of the Afars and the Issas, 1977, on independence from France as Djibouti

French Sudan, 1960, on independence from France as Mali Federation (now Republic of Mali and Senegal)

★ French Togoland, 1960, on independence from France as Togo

French West Africa, 1960, on independence from France as Dahomey (now Benin)

Gambia, 1965, on independence from the United Kingdom

Gilbert Islands, 1979, on independence from the United Kingdom as Kiribati

Gold Coast, 1957, on independence from the United Kingdom as Ghana

Grenada, 1974, on independence from the United Kingdom

Guinea, 1958, on independence from France

Jamaica, 1962, on independence from the United Kingdom

Kenya, 1963, on independence from the United Kingdom

Laos (formerly part of French Indo-China), 1949, on independence from France

Madagascar, 1960, on independence from France

Malaya, 1957, on independence from the United Kingdom (now part of Malaysia)

Malta, 1964, on independence from the United Kingdom

Marshall Islands 1990, on independence from the United States

Mauritius, 1968, on independence from the United Kingdom

Micronesia 1990, on independence from the United States

Morocco, 1956, on independence from France

Mozambique, 1975, on independence from Portugal

Nauru, 1968, on independence from United Nations trusteeship administered by Australia on behalf of the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand

Netherlands Indies, 1949, on independence from the Netherlands as Indonesia

Netherlands New Guinea, 1963, on incorporation into Indonesia

New Guinea, 1975, on independence from Australia as part of Papua New Guinea

New Hebrides, 1980, on independence from Anglo-French Condominium as Vanuatu

Nigeria, 1960, on independence from the United Kingdom

North Borneo (also known as Sabah), 1963, on joining the Federation of Malaysia

Northern Rhodesia, 1964, on independence from the United Kingdom as Zambia

Nyasaland, 1964, on independence from the United Kingdom as Malawi

Palau, 1994, on independence from the United States

Papua, 1975, on independence from Australia as part of Papua New Guinea

Portuguese Guinea, 1973, on independence from Portugal as Guinea-Bissau

Ruanda-Urundi, 1962, on independence from Belgium as Rwanda and Burundi

Sao Tome and Principe, 1975, on independence from Portugal

Saint Kitts-Nevis, 1983, on independence from the United Kingdom

Saint Lucia, 1979, on independence from the United Kingdom

Saint Vincent, 1979, on independence from the United Kingdom as Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

Sarawak, 1963, on joining the Federation of Malaysia

Seychelles, 1976, on independence from the United Kingdom

Sierra Leone, 1961, on independence from the United Kingdom

Singapore, 1963, on joining the Federation of Malaysia (separate independence as Singapore 1965)

Solomon Islands Protectorate, 1978, on independence from the United Kingdom

Somaliland, 1960, on independence from Italy as part of Somalia

Southern Rhodesia, 1980, on independence as Zimbabwe

South-West Africa, March 21 1990, on independence from South Africa as Namibia

Swaziland, 1968, on independence from the United Kingdom

Tanganyika, 1961, on independence from the United Kingdom (now part of Tanzania)

Trinidad and Tobago, 1962, on independence from the United Kingdom

Tunisia, 1956, on independence from France

Ubangi Shari, 1960, on independence from France as Central African Republic

Uganda, 1962, on independence from the United Kingdom

Vietnam (formerly part of French Indo-China), 1954, on independence from France

Western Samoa, 1962, on independence from New Zealand (known in the United Nations as Samoa)

Zanzibar, 1963, on independence from the United Kingdom (now part of Tanzania)

Sources



Non-Self-Governing Territories listed by General Assembly of the United Nations in 2002.

See also



Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization

List of active autonomist and secessionist movements

List of dependent territories

List of sovereign states

List of unrecognized countries

Tokelau self-determination referendum, 2006

External links



Decolonization Committee homepage

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