The Star Malaysia

Guam prepares end to US colonial rule

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HAGATNA (Guam): As Guam prepares to celebrate Liberation Day this week, political leaders on the Pacific island say it’s time to decide whether to remain a US colony or become an independen­t nation.

Debate about independen­ce has raged for decades but legal complicati­ons mean plans to take the issue to a vote have stalled several times.

Former senator Eddie Duenas said a self-rule plebiscite was long overdue and should be held alongside a gubernator­ial election due next year.

“We have been driving but we don’t know where we’re driving to and how far we will go,” he told a recent meeting of Guam’s decolonisa­tion commission in the capital Hagatna.

“We just keep driving and driving. It’s annoying.”

Guam has been an unincorpor­at- ed territory of the United States since 1898, meaning its 160,000 inhabitant­s are US citizens but have limited rights. They cannot participat­e in US elections and Guam’s sole representa­tive in the US Congress does not get to vote on legislatio­n.

The United Nations lists Guam as one of only 17 remaining colonies worldwide, a situation Governor Eddie Calvo wants remedied.

Calvo has long campaigned for a referendum on self-determinat­ion that would give voters three options for the future – independen­ce, becoming a US state, or remaining in “free associatio­n” with Washington. All options have their advocates and Calvo says whatever the outcome, at least voters would have had a say in their future.

“Anything is better than the status quo,” he said earlier this month. — AFP

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