Jump directly to the content
BOUNTIFUL BUDGET

Britain sends almost £18MILLION in foreign aid to 42-inhabitant Mutiny on Bounty island – £426,000 for EACH islander!

The amount of British taxpayer's cash going to the island has come under scrutiny as the Government is urged to look again at foreign aid spending

The 42 inhabitants of Pitcairn Island in the Pacific received £18million from Britain in the last six years

MORE than £400,000 each in foreign aid has been paid from the Treasury's coffers to the 42 inhabitants of a tiny Pacific island in the last six years - but they don't pay a penny back in tax.

The UK taxpayer has stumped up the cash for those who live on Pitcairn Island - which works out at around £17.9million - since 2011, with this year's payout set to reach almost £3.5million alone.

 The 42 inhabitants of Pitcairn Island in the Pacific received £18million from Britain in the last six years
6
The 42 inhabitants of Pitcairn Island in the Pacific received £18million from Britain in the last six yearsCredit: Getty Images
 This year alone they will each get around £82,750
6
This year alone they will each get around £82,750Credit: Getty Images

That equates to around £82,750 each - three times the salary of the average British worker.

The cash has been forked out to pay for the costs of running a school, health centre and ferry service for the residents of the island, which sits halfway between New Zealand and Peru, reports .

The costs are covered by the overseas aid department, Dfid, providing locals with a doctor, nurse, policeman and teacher.

 The costs are covered by the overseas aid department, Dfid
6
The costs are covered by the overseas aid department, DfidCredit: Getty Images
 The islanders receive a government wage or pension paid for by the UK and can get child benefits, but pay no taxes
6
The islanders receive a government wage or pension paid for by the UK and can get child benefits, but pay no taxesCredit: Getty Images

The islanders of the British overseas territory, who receive a government wage or pension paid for by the UK, are descendants of sailors who took part in the Mutiny on the Bounty in 1790.

They are also eligible to receive child benefit but pay no tax.

Pitcairn was colonised by nine mutinous sailors from the crew of the Bounty led by Fletcher Christian.

They arrived from Tahiti along with 18 Polynesians.

Their story has been retold a number of times on the silver screen, including in the 1962 film Mutiny on the Bounty starring Marlon Brando and Trevor Howard.

It is one of 14 British overseas territories where inhabitants have the right to British citizenship and the Government is legally obliged to ensure their wellbeing.

After joining the British Empire in 1838, the overseas territory supported itself through the sale of stamps and coins, but the UK stepped in when interest in collecting declined.

In recent years the British Government has come under renewed pressure to review its foreign aid spend.

 It is one of 14 British overseas territories where inhabitants have the right to British citizenship
6
It is one of 14 British overseas territories where inhabitants have the right to British citizenshipCredit: Getty Images

Alex Wild of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, told MailOnline: "Pitcairn is clearly a special case. But as with every spending decision, it is crucial that the money sent out is proportionate to need and spent efficiently."

Since 2004 a social worker has been paid for on the island, which is less than three miles wide, after a sex scandal was exposed involving six men, including the former mayor, being charged with the rape of children as young as seven.

A well-equipped health centre has been built but islanders with serious medical problems are evacuated by sea and air to New Zealand at a cost of around £30,000 a time. Treatment is paid for either by a government loan or grant.

 They are descendants of sailors who took part in the Mutiny on the Bounty in 1790, the story of which was told on screen starring Marlon Brando
6
They are descendants of sailors who took part in the Mutiny on the Bounty in 1790, the story of which was told on screen starring Marlon BrandoCredit: Allstar

A ferry, which costs £1.2million a year to run, makes four annual trips to New Zealand, with voyages lasting 12 days each way.

A Dfid spokesman added:"The UK Government has international legal obligations to support the British people on Pitcairn Islands."

Pitcairn IslandColonised by mutineers, plagued by child sex scandals: The troubled history of Pitcairn island

THE islanders are descendants of sailors who took part in the Mutiny on the Bounty in 1790.

Pitcairn was colonised by nine mutinous sailors from the crew of the Bounty led by Fletcher Christian.
They arrived from Tahiti along with 18 Polynesians.
Their story has been retold a number of times on the silver screen, including in the 1962 film Mutiny on the Bounty starring Marlon Brando and Trevor Howard.
Since 2004 a social worker has been paid for on the island, which is less than three miles wide, after a sex scandal was exposed involving six men, including the former mayor, being charged with the rape of children as young as seven.
Seven men living on the island and six living abroad would be charged with sexual activity with children.
This accounted for almost a third of the island's male population.
In 2010 the mayor of the Island was charged with 25 counts of possessing indecent images of children and following these two scnadals any child under 16 wishing to visit the island must make an "entry clearance application".
The Foreign office does not allow their staff based on the island to take their children with them. Latest estimates for the island's population put it at 49 people.
Archaeologists think the first settlers lived on the island as late as the 15th centuary but over time exhausted natural resources and eventually caused a civil war between the islanders, tragically causing the human populations to die out.
The Pacific islands were then rediscovered by the Portuguese explorer Pedro Fernandes de Queiros sailing for the Spanish crown on 26 January 1606 originally naming Pitcairn La Encarnacion.
The island was renamed by the British after it was spotted by the crew of HMS swallow in 1767. It was named after a 15-year-old Midshipman, Robert Pitcairn, who was the first to spot the island. Pitcairn was properly settled by some of the mutiners from HMS bounty in 1790.
The mutiny occured when angry crew set their captain, William Bligh adrift on 28 April 1789 in the south Pacific and the island was settled again the following year Another five years would pass before the settlers would see another ship from the island but it did not approach.
Pitcairn became a British Colony in 1838 and was eventually converted to the Seventh-day Adventist branch of Christianity druing the centuary.


We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at [email protected] or call 0207 782 4368


 

Topics