Declaration 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. When capitalized or unqualified
(the Declaration of Independence) it usually efers to that of the country in
discussion, or sometimes to the United States Declaration of Independence.
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. Money is often an important factor, with control of important resources such as ports, oil
fields or strategic towns or geographic features leading to dispute. If a government has extemely large debts to other
organisations, there will be international pressure for these debts to be taken over by successor governments, even if the
original governmental organisation is disbanded.
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.
Many declarations of independence including those for Texas, Rhodesia, and Vietnam have been modeled on the United States Declaration of
Independence.
Examples of UDIs
- The Oath of Abjuration or Plakkaat of Verlatinghe
of July 26, 1581, was the formal declaration of independence of the northern Low Countries of their king Philip II.
- Brazil was declared independent from Portugal on September 7th, 1822 by then-regent Pedro de Bragança e Bourbon,
who was then crowned emperor Peter I of Brazil.
- Texas declared its independence from Mexico in 1836.
- Iceland unilaterally declared its independence from Denmark (following a plebiscite of the local population) on
June 17, 1944. The Danish King Christian X (whose country was occupied by the Nazis at the time) had urged Iceland to wait until the end of the war before making
any such move but otherwise did nothing to prevent it (and was unable to do so in any case).
- 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 Communist and Third World countries including the People's Republic of China, but not by neighboring Australia, Portugal 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. (see Reference re Secession of Quebec)
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. Opponents of Taiwan
independence on Taiwan, who are sometimes but not always supporters of Chinese reunification, 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.
See also: Independence Day, Separatism
|