, in 2012 on 6 February 2013, as seen from space. The population was temporarily evacuated to the UK in 1961 because of an eruption. , the site of the new capital of
Montserrat replacing
Plymouth. The project is funded by the UK's
Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (previously the
Department for International Development). Historically the
Secretary of State for the Colonies and the
Colonial Office were responsible for overseeing all British Colonies, but today the
Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) has the responsibility of looking after the interests of all overseas territories except the
Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia, which comes under the jurisdiction of the
Ministry of Defence. Within the FCDO, the general responsibility for the territories is handled by the Overseas Territories Directorate. In 2012, the FCO published
The Overseas Territories: security, success and sustainability which set out Britain's policy for the Overseas Territories, covering six main areas: • Defence, security and safety of the territories and their people • Successful and resilient economies • Cherishing the environment • Making government work better • Vibrant and flourishing communities • Productive links with the wider world Britain and the Overseas Territories do not have diplomatic representations, although the governments of the overseas territories with indigenous populations all retain a representative office in London. The
United Kingdom Overseas Territories Association (UKOTA) also represents the interests of the territories in London. The governments in both London and the territories occasionally meet to mitigate or resolve disagreements over the process of governance in the territories and levels of autonomy. Britain provides financial assistance to the overseas territories via the FCDO (previously the
Department for International Development). As of 2019, only Montserrat, Saint Helena, Pitcairn and Tristan da Cunha receive budgetary aid (i.e. financial contribution to recurrent funding). Several specialist funds are made available by the UK, including: • The Good Government Fund, which assists with government administration. • The Economic Diversification Programme Budget, which aims to diversify and enhance the economic bases of the territories. The territories have no official representation in the UK Parliament, but have informal representation through the
all-party parliamentary group, and can
petition the UK government through the
Directgov e-Petitions website. Two national parties,
UK Independence Party and the
Liberal Democrats, have endorsed calls for direct representation of overseas territories in the UK Parliament, as well as backbench members of the
Conservative Party and
Labour Party. On 29 January 2024, the
Chief Minister of Gibraltar Fabian Picardo addressed the House of Commons Procedure Committee, discussing Gibraltar's representation in the UK Parliament. He highlighted that the UK Government's "Votes for Life" policy now allows all Gibraltarians who have previously lived in the UK, such as students, to register to vote in UK general elections, regardless of how long ago they lived there. However, Picardo noted that there is currently no formal mechanism to ensure Gibraltar's interests are represented under the constituency system, relying instead on the voluntary interest of individual MPs, such as those in the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Gibraltar. He acknowledged the challenge of balancing Westminster representation with Gibraltar's self-governance but suggested that the evolving devolution landscape could provide a framework for addressing this issue.
Foreign affairs claimed by the UK as
British Antarctic Territory Foreign affairs of the overseas territories are handled by the FCDO in London. Some territories maintain diplomatic officers in nearby countries for trade and immigration purposes. Several of the territories in the Americas maintain membership within the
Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States, the
Caribbean Community, the
Caribbean Development Bank,
Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency and the
Association of Caribbean States. The territories are members of the
Commonwealth of Nations through the United Kingdom. The inhabited territories compete in their own right at the
Commonwealth Games, and three of the territories (
Bermuda, the
Cayman Islands and the
British Virgin Islands) sent teams to the
2016 Summer Olympics. Although the
Crown Dependencies of
Jersey,
Guernsey and the
Isle of Man are also under the
sovereignty of the
British monarch, they are in a different constitutional relationship with the United Kingdom. The British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies are themselves distinct from the
Commonwealth realms, a group of 15 independent countries (including the United Kingdom) sharing as
monarch and
head of state, and from the
Commonwealth of Nations, a voluntary association of 56 countries mostly with historic links to the British Empire (which also includes all Commonwealth realms). Notably, while not independent Commonwealth realms, the territories are separately represented at the
Commonwealth Games on the same basis as independent nation members, as are the three Crown Dependencies of Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man. Full
British citizenship has been granted to most 'belongers' of overseas territories (mainly since the
British Overseas Territories Act 2002). Most countries do not recognise the sovereignty claims of any other country, including Britain's, to Antarctica and its offshore islands. Five nations contest, with counter-claims, the UK's sovereignty in the following overseas territories: •
British Antarctic Territory – territory overlaps Antarctic claims made by Chile and Argentina •
British Indian Ocean Territory – claimed by
Mauritius •
Falkland Islands – claimed by Argentina •
Gibraltar – claimed by Spain •
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands – claimed by Argentina
Citizenship dress in their national colours of red and white during the 2013
Gibraltar National Day celebrations. Gibraltarians were the only group of overseas territories residents who could apply for full British citizenship without restrictions before 2002. From 1949 to 1983, the nationality status of
Citizenship of UK and Colonies (CUKC) was shared by residents of the UK proper and residents of overseas territories, although most residents of overseas territories lost their automatic right to live in the UK after the ratification of
Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1968 that year unless they were born in the UK proper or had a parent or a grandparent born in the UK. In 1983, CUKC status of residents of overseas territories without the right of abode in the UK was replaced by British Dependent Territories citizenship (BDTC) in the newly minted
British Nationality Act 1981, a status that does not come with it the right of abode in the UK or any overseas territory. For these residents, registration as full British citizens then required physical residence in the UK proper. There were only two exceptions: Falkland Islanders, who were automatically granted British citizenship, and with the Falkland Islands treated as a part of the UK proper through the enactment of
British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Act 1983 due to the
Falklands War with Argentina; and Gibraltarians, who were given the special entitlement to be registered as British citizens upon request without further conditions because of its individual membership in the
European Economic Area and the
European Economic Community. Five years after the
handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997, the British government amended the 1981 Act to give British citizenship without restrictions to all BDTCs (the status was also renamed BOTC at the same time) except for those solely connected with
Akrotiri and Dhekelia (whose residents already held
Cypriot citizenship). This restored the right of abode in the UK to residents of overseas territories after a 34-year hiatus from 1968 to 2002.
Military , Falkland Islands at Queen's Birthday Parade in 2017 Defence of the overseas territories is the responsibility of the United Kingdom. Many of the overseas territories are used as military bases by the United Kingdom and its allies: •
Ascension Island (part of
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha) – the base known as
RAF Ascension Island is used by both the
Royal Air Force and the
United States Air Force. •
Bermuda – became the primary
Royal Navy base in North America, following US independence, and was designated an
Imperial fortress. The naval establishment included an admiralty, a
dockyard, and a naval squadron. A considerable
military garrison was built up to protect it, and Bermuda, which the British government came to see as a base, rather than as a colony, was known as
Fortress Bermuda, and the
Gibraltar of the West (Bermudians, like Gibraltarians, also dub their territory "The Rock"). Canada and the United States also established bases in Bermuda during the Second World War, which were maintained through the
Cold War. Four air bases were located in Bermuda during the Second World War (operated by the Royal Air Force, Royal Navy,
United States Navy and
United States Army /
United States Army Air Forces). Since 1995, the
naval and military force in Bermuda has been reduced to the local
territorial battalion, the
Royal Bermuda Regiment. •
British Indian Ocean Territory – the island of
Diego Garcia is home to a large naval base and airbase leased to the United States by the United Kingdom until 2036 (unless renewed). There are British forces in small numbers in the BIOT for administrative and immigration purposes. •
Falkland Islands – the
British Forces Falkland Islands includes commitments from the
British Army,
Royal Air Force and
Royal Navy, along with the
Falkland Islands Defence Force. •
Gibraltar – Historically designated (along with Bermuda,
Malta, and
Halifax, Nova Scotia) as an Imperial fortress.
British Forces Gibraltar included a
Royal Navy Dockyard, HM Dockyard, Gibraltar, now
Gibdock (also used by the Royal Navy),
RAF Gibraltar – used by the RAF and NATO and a local infantry garrison – the
Royal Gibraltar Regiment, which is part of the British Army. Spain, even though a member of NATO itself, has banned all visits to Gibraltar by non-UK craft. Even RAF UK fighter aircraft are banned, and only transport planes are permitted. • The Sovereign Base Areas of
Akrotiri and Dhekelia in Cyprus – maintained as strategic British military bases in the eastern
Mediterranean Sea. •
Montserrat – the
Royal Montserrat Defence Force, historically connected with the Irish Guards, is a body of twenty volunteers, whose duties are primarily ceremonial. •
Cayman Islands – The
Cayman Islands Regiment is the home defence unit of the Cayman Islands. It is a single territorial infantry battalion of the British Armed Forces that was formed in 2020. •
Turks and Caicos – The
Turks and Caicos Islands Regiment is the home defence unit of the British Overseas Territory of the Turks and Caicos Islands. It is a single territorial infantry battalion of the British Armed Forces that was formed in 2020, similar to the Cayman Regiment. == City status and cities ==