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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Pacific Islands Political Geography > Cocos Islands
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Cocos Islands, Pacific Islands Political Geography

Related Category: Pacific Islands Political Geography

Cocos Islands[kO´kOs] Pronunciation Key or Keeling Islands, officially Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands, two separate atolls comprising 27 coral islets (1996 pop. 655), 5.5 sq mi (14.2 sq km), in the Indian Ocean, c.1,400 mi (2,250 km) SE of Sri Lanka. They are under Australian administration. Only three of the islands are inhabited: West Island, which has an airport and the largest community of Europeans; Home Island, the former headquarters of the Clunies-Ross Estate and inhabited mainly by Cocos Malays; and Direction Island, which has an aviation-marine base. The predominant religion is Sunni Muslim; the major language is English. The economy is based on aviation and government facilities maintained by the Australian government. Coconuts are harvested, but copra production ceased in the 1980s; there is some tourism and fishing.

Discovered in 1609 by Capt. William Keeling of the East India Company, the Cocos were settled in 1826 by Alexander Hare, an Englishman. A second settlement was founded in 1827 by John Clunies-Ross, a Scottish seaman, who landed with a boatload of Malay sailors. In 1857 the islands were annexed to the British crown. Queen Victoria granted the lands to the Clunies-Ross family in 1886 in return for the right to use any land on the island for public purposes. In 1903, as a dependency of Britain's Singapore colony, the islands were included in the Straits Settlements; in 1955 they were placed under Australian administration. In 1978, Australia purchased the Clunies-Ross family's interests in the islands, except for the family estate. Island residents voted to become part of Australia in 1984. Australia purchased the last Clunies-Ross-owned property in the islands in 1993.



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