Migrants brought to UK from remote military island
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Diego Garcia hosts a joint UK-US military base
Migrants stranded for more than three years on the remote Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia have been brought to the UK.
The Sri Lankan Tamils are permitted to remain in the country for six months, with financial support from the Foreign Office, according to documents seen by the BBC.
Their journey to the UK marks the end of years of complex legal battles waged over thousands of miles over their fate, but their long-term future remains uncertain.
Most of the group of around 60 migrants have been living in a makeshift camp on Diego Garcia - the site of a strategic UK-US military base - since October 2021, when they became the first people ever to file asylum claims there.
On Monday, a government spokesperson described the move as a "one-off, due to the exceptional nature of these cases and in the interests of their welfare".
"This government inherited a deeply troubling situation that remained unresolved under the last administration for years," the spokesperson said.
Tessa Gregory of UK law firm Leigh Day, which represents some of the migrants, said it was the "only sensible solution to end the humanitarian crisis" on the island.
"This vulnerable group which includes 16 children have spent 38 months detained in the most squalid of conditions on Crown land... we hope our clients will now be able to seek safe haven and begin to rebuild their lives," she said.
The BBC gained unprecedented access earlier this year to Diego Garcia and the migrant camp there, where the Tamils were housed in groups in military tents, some of which had leaks and rats nesting inside.
During their time on the island, there were multiple hunger strikes and numerous incidents of self-harm and suicide attempts in response to the conditions, after which some people were transferred to Rwanda for medical treatment.
There were also allegations of sexual assaults and harassment within the camp.
Migrants have told the BBC it was like living in "hell".
In letters sent to the Tamils on Friday from the Home Office, they were told they were being granted temporary entry clearance to the UK "outside of the Immigration Rules" to allow them to consider their "long-term options".
It stressed that the offer did not "constitute permanent settlement in the UK or recognition of refugee status by the UK government", and said the group would not be permitted to work.
The government says the Chagos Islands, known as the British Indian Ocean Territory (Biot), are "constitutionally distinct" from the UK, with the unusual status leading to the long legal dispute.
Most of the Tamils have been awaiting final decisions on claims for international protection - which the United Nations says is akin to refugee status - or appealing against rejections.
In total, eight have been granted international protection, meaning they cannot be returned to Sri Lanka, the BBC understands.
Successive governments have previously said that bringing the Tamils to the UK would risk creating a "backdoor migration route".
But the government said on Monday that arrangements had been made to ensure this did not happen, citing a deal to send future arrivals to St Helena - another UK territory some 5,000 miles away.
"Once a sovereignty agreement with Mauritius is fully in place they would then take responsibility for any future migrants," the spokesperson said.


