French Possessions
Bassas da India (0.1 sq mi, 0.2 sq km), a French possession since 1897, is an uninhabited volcanic atoll off the southeastern coast of Africa in the Mozambique channel.
Source: The World Factbook 2003
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Clipperton Island (2 sq mi, 6 sq km) is an uninhabited atoll named for a pirate who used it as a hideout in the 18th century. Located in the Pacific Ocean southwest of Mexico, it was claimed by France in 1855, seized by Mexico in 1897, and ultimately awarded to France in 1935.
See also Clipperton Island: Pirate's Lair.
Source: The World Factbook 2003
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Europa Island (11 sq mi, 28 sq km), a French possession since 1897, is located off the southeastern coast of Africa in the southern Mozambique channel. A small French military garrison resides there.
Source: The World Factbook 2003
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Glorioso Islands (2 sq mi, 5 sq km), a French possession since 1892, is composed of two coral islands (Ile Glorieuse and Ile du Lys) and three rock islets. Uninhabited except for a military garrison on Ile Glorieuse, the islands are located off Southern Africa, northwest of Madagascar.
Source: The World Factbook 2003
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Juan de Nova Island (1.7 sq mi, 4.4 sq km) is named after a famous 15th-century Spanish explorer and has been a French possession since 1897. Located off southern Africa in the Mozambique Channel, the island is inhabited by a small French garrison.
Source: The World Factbook 2003
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Tromelin Island (0.4 sq mi, 1 sq km), a possession of France since 1814, is located in the Indian Ocean, east of Madagascar. It currently serves as a sea turtle sanctuary and a meteorological station.
Source: The World Factbook 2003
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French Territorial Collectivities | France |