Wikpedia on Declarations of
independence
A declaration of
independence is a proclamation of the
independence of a newly formed or reformed country from part or the whole
of the territory of another, or a document containing
such a declaration. Declarations of independence are
generally made by one side without the consent of the
previous government, and hence are often called
unilateral declaration of
independence or UDI.
In international law, unilateral
declarations of independence are generally frowned
upon, since preservation of territory is one of the
few things that the countries of the world
universally agree on. Declaring independence or
supporting such a declaration is seen as a hostile
act, that may easily lead to war.
Many states have come into being
through an act of UDI. The legality of a UDI is often
the subject of debate and unsurprisingly the previous
government typically asserts that a UDI is illegal.
Often, international bodies and other countries
decline at first to accept the legitimacy of the
declared state and its government. If the declared
state becomes a functioning entity, it may gain
diplomatic recognition over time and a form of
backdated legitimacy. Not all such declarations
result in actual states and those governments that do
result from UDIs do not always survive and are often
rivaled by the previous government. A significant
number of unilaterally declared governments collapse
or otherwise give way, with control returning to the
previous government or shifting to a new follow-on
government.
Examples of UDIs
-
Katanga, a former a province of
Belgian Congo, broke away
with an UDI in 1960, when Congo was granted its
independence. The attempted break away ended by
the implementation of a UN supervised National
Conciliation Plan in January 1963.
-
Rhodesia (Ian Smith's white minority
government) declared UDI from the United Kingdom in 1965. Few
states accepted its legitimacy. The UDI Rhodesian
state was ultimately replaced under the Lancaster House Agreement
by a restored British regime under a governor,
Lord Soames. Within a short
time, a new much more-widely recognized
independent state, Zimbabwe, came into existence.
-
Guinea Bissau, formerly
Portuguese Guinea, declared independence from
Portugal in 1973, which was recognized by many
countries, before Portugal formally granted
independence in 1974.
-
East Timor, formerly Portuguese
Timor, declared independence from Portugal on
November 28, 1975, which was recognized by
several countries including China, but not by neighboring
Australia, or by Indonesia, which invaded on
December 7 1975, and annexed it as its '27th
province' on July 17, 1976.
Recent self-declared states also include Chechnya, Somaliland, and Somaliland's neighbor,
Puntland.
Threatened UDIs
The Canadian province of Quebec had occasionally
threatened to issue a UDI. The Supreme Court of Canada has
ruled that a UDI by Quebec would have no legal
effect.
Situations without UDIs
In many cases, independence is
achieved without a declaration of independence but
instead has occurred by bilateral agreement. An
example of this were the components of the British Empire, most parts of which
achieved independence through negotiation with the
United Kingdom.
One notable non-declaration of
independence has been Taiwan, which is administered by the
Republic of China. A formal
declaration that Taiwan is independent of China has been one of
conditions under which the People's Republic of China
would use force against Taiwan. The political status of Taiwan
remains controversial, and the position of most
supporters of Taiwan independence has been
since the Taiwan has never been a part of the PRC,
and the governing institutions (of the ROC) function
as an independent and sovereign state, there is no
need to formally declare Taiwan to be independent.
Supporters of Chinese reunification on Taiwan
also see no point in a declaration of independence in
that they argue that Taiwan is and should be part of
a greater entity cultural entity of China, and a new Republic of Taiwan would only
bring about a name change in exchange for a communist
invasion attempt Taiwan could little afford.
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