Chagossian creole
| Chagossian Creole | |
|---|---|
| kreol Ilwa | |
| Native to | Mauritius, Seychelles | 
| Ethnicity | Chagossians | 
| Native speakers | (1,800 cited 1994) | 
| French Creole
 
 | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | – | 
| Glottolog | None | 
| IETF | mfe-IO | 
Chagossian creole also known as Chagossian Kreol (also créole îlois, kreol Ilwa, or just Ilwa) is a French-based creole that was still spoken in 1994 by the 1,800 or so Chagossians, the former inhabitants of the Chagos Archipelago evicted in the early 1970s. Ilwa is a variety of Mauritian Creole with influences from Seychellois Creole. It is currently spoken mainly in Mauritius and the Seychelles. There is also a small minority community speaking the language in the United Kingdom.