Member states of the Commonwealth of Nations

The Commonwealth of Nations is a voluntary association of 56 sovereign states. Most of them were British colonies or dependencies of those colonies.

No government in the Commonwealth exercises power over the others, as is the case in a political union. Rather, the Commonwealth is an international organization in which countries with diverse social, political, and economic backgrounds are regarded as equal in status, and cooperate within a framework of common values and goals, as outlined in the Singapore Declaration issued in 1971.[1] Such common values and goals include the promotion of democracy, human rights, good governance, the rule of law, civil liberties, equality before the law, free trade, multilateralism, and world peace, which are promoted through multilateral projects and meetings, such as the Commonwealth Games, held once every four years.[2]

The symbol of this free association is King Charles III, who serves as the Head of the Commonwealth. This position, however, does not imbue him with any political or executive power over any Commonwealth member states; the position is purely symbolic, and it is the Commonwealth Secretary-General who is the chief executive of the Commonwealth.[3]

The Commonwealth was first officially formed in 1926 when the Balfour Declaration of the Imperial Conference recognised the full sovereignty of dominions. Known as the "British Commonwealth", the original and therefore earliest members were Australia, Canada, the Irish Free State, Newfoundland, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United Kingdom. It was re-stated by the 1930 conference and incorporated in the Statute of Westminster the following year (although Australia and New Zealand did not adopt the statute until 1942 and 1947, respectively).[4] In 1949, the London Declaration marked the birth of the modern Commonwealth and the adoption of its present name.[5] The members have a combined population of 2.6 billion, almost a third of the world's population, of whom 1.21 billion live in India, and 95% live in Africa and Asia combined.[6] The most recent members to join were the Francophone African nations of Gabon and Togo on 29 June 2022, who along with Mozambique and Rwanda are unique in not having a historical constitutional relationship with the United Kingdom or other Commonwealth states.

Currently, fifteen of the member states are Commonwealth realms, with the Head of the Commonwealth as their heads of state, five others are monarchies with their own individual monarchs (Brunei, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malaysia, and Tonga), and the rest are republics. The Republic of Ireland (as of 1949 according to the Commonwealth; 1936 according to the Irish government) and Zimbabwe (2003) are former members of the Commonwealth.

Current member states edit

All dates below are provided by the Commonwealth of Nations Secretariat members list,[7] and population figures are as of 1 February 2020.

CountryFirst JoinedUN Continental RegionUN Geographical SubregionPopulation[8]System of GovernmentNotes[A]
 Antigua and Barbuda1 November 1981AmericasCaribbean94,298Unitary Commonwealth realm
 Australia19 November 1926OceaniaAustralia and New Zealand26,256,970Federal Commonwealth realmAustralia was one of the original Dominions at the time of the Balfour Declaration of 1926 and the Statute of Westminster 1931, although the statute was not adopted in Australia until 1942 (with retroactive effect from 1939).[9] The Australia Act 1986 eliminated the remaining possibilities for the UK to legislate with effect in Australia, for the UK to be involved in Australian government, and for an appeal from any Australian court to a British court.[10]
 Bahamas10 July 1973AmericasCaribbean412,623Unitary Commonwealth realm
 Bangladesh18 April 1972[11]AsiaSouthern Asia172,954,319Unitary Westminster republicDeclared independence from Pakistan in 1971.[12]
 Barbados30 November 1966AmericasCaribbean281,995Unitary Westminster republicBarbados removed Elizabeth II as its head of state and became a republic on 30 November 2021.[13][14]
 Belize21 September 1981AmericasCentral America410,825Unitary Commonwealth realm
 Botswana30 September 1966AfricaSouthern Africa2,675,352Unitary parliamentary republic with an executive presidency
 Brunei7 May 1984AsiaSouth-eastern Asia452,524Unitary Islamic absolute monarchy
 Cameroon1 November 1995[15]AfricaMiddle Africa28,647,293Unitary semi-presidential republicMost of the country was the formerly French mandate territory (later UN trust territory) of Cameroun, which gained independence from France on 1 January 1960. It united with the much smaller former British mandate/trust territory of Southern Cameroons, which gained independence from the United Kingdom on 1 October 1961.
 Canada19 November 1926AmericasNorth America39,244,168Federal Commonwealth realmCanada was the first among the several original Dominions at the time of the Balfour Declaration of 1926 and the Statute of Westminster 1931.[16] Incorporated another original Dominion, Newfoundland, on 31 March 1949.[17] The Canada Act 1982 formally ended the "request and consent" provisions of the Statute of Westminster 1931 in relation to Canada, whereby the British parliament had a general power to pass laws extending to Canada at its own request.
 Cyprus[D]13 March 1961[18]EuropeSoutheast Europe1,260,138Unitary presidential republicGained independence from the United Kingdom on 16 August 1960. Britain retains military bases at Akrotiri and Dhekelia. Northern Cyprus is not recognised by the Commonwealth.
 Dominica3 November 1978AmericasCaribbean73,040Unitary Westminster republicDominica has always been a republic since independence.
 Eswatini6 September 1968AfricaSouthern Africa1,210,822Unitary absolute monarchyJoined as Swaziland, subsequently changing its name to Eswatini on 19 April 2018.
 Fiji[B]10 October 1970OceaniaMelanesia936,375Unitary Westminster republicSuspended in 1987; rejoined in 1997; suspended on 6 June 2000;[19] suspension lifted on 20 December 2001;[20] again suspended on 8 December 2006 because of the 2006 Fijian coup d'état.[21][22] Suspension lifted on 26 September 2014.
 Gabon[B]25 June 2022AfricaMiddle Africa2,436,566Unitary presidential republicGained independence from France on 17 August 1960. The third (after Mozambique and Rwanda) to be admitted to the Commonwealth without any former colonial or constitutional links with the United Kingdom.[23] Partially suspended on 18 September 2023 following the military coup that ousted President Ali Bongo the previous month, with two years given by the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group for the country to hold new elections before a full suspension of membership would be considered.[24][25]
 Gambia18 February 1965AfricaWestern Africa2,773,168Unitary presidential republicWithdrew on 3 October 2013 citing "neocolonialism".[26][27] Following the election of Adama Barrow as President of Gambia in 2016, it submitted an application to rejoin the Commonwealth on 22 January 2018,[28] and rejoined on 8 February 2018.[29]
 Ghana6 March 1957AfricaWestern Africa34,121,985Unitary presidential republic
 Grenada7 February 1974AmericasCaribbean126,183Unitary Commonwealth realm
 Guyana26 May 1966AmericasSouth America813,834Unitary presidential republic
 India15 August 1947AsiaSouthern Asia1,428,627,663Federal Westminster republicIncorporated former French India (Chandannagar from 2 May 1950 and Puducherry, Karaikal, Yanam and Mahé from 1 November 1954), former Portuguese India (Goa, Daman and Diu from 19 December 1961 and Dadra and Nagar Haveli formally from 1961) and Sikkim (from 16 May 1975).
 Jamaica6 August 1962AmericasCaribbean2,825,544Unitary Commonwealth realm
 Kenya12 December 1963AfricaEastern Africa55,100,586Unitary presidential republic
 Kiribati12 July 1979OceaniaMicronesia133,515Unitary parliamentary republic with an executive presidency
 Lesotho4 October 1966AfricaSouthern Africa2,330,318Unitary Westminster monarchy[E]
 Malawi6 July 1964AfricaEastern Africa20,931,751Unitary presidential republic
 Malaysia31 August 1957[30][31]AsiaSouth-eastern Asia34,308,525Federal Westminster monarchy[E]Joined as the Federation of Malaya in 1957; reformed as Malaysia on 16 September 1963 with its federation with Singapore (which became a separate country on 9 August 1965), North Borneo, and Sarawak.[32]
 Maldives9 July 1982AsiaSouthern Asia521,021Unitary presidential republicGained independence from the United Kingdom on 26 July 1965.[33] A special member from 9 July 1982 until 20 July 1985.[34] Withdrew on 13 October 2016.[35][36] Rejoined on 1 February 2020.[37]
 Malta[F]21 September 1964EuropeSouthern Europe532,616Unitary Westminster republicGained independence from the United Kingdom on 21 September 1964 as the State of Malta. Became a republic on 13 December 1974.
 Mauritius12 March 1968AfricaEastern Africa1,263,939Unitary Westminster republicBecame a republic on 12 March 1992.
 Mozambique13 November 1995[38]AfricaEastern Africa33,897,354Unitary semi-presidential republicFormer dependency of Portuguese India until 1752. Gained independence from Portugal on 25 June 1975. The first country to be admitted to the Commonwealth without any former colonial or constitutional links with the United Kingdom.[39]
 Namibia21 March 1990AfricaSouthern Africa2,604,172Unitary semi-presidential republicGained independence from South Africa.[40] Includes Walvis Bay and the Penguin Islands transferred by South Africa at midnight 28 February 1994.
 Nauru[B]29 November 1968OceaniaMicronesia12,780Unitary parliamentary republic with an executive presidencyGained independence on 31 January 1968 from joint trusteeship of Australia, New Zealand and United Kingdom. A special member from 29 November 1968 until 1 May 1999, when it became a full member,[41] before reverting to special status in January 2006.[42] A full member again since June 2011.[43]
 New Zealand19 November 1926OceaniaAustralia and New Zealand5,163,908Unitary Commonwealth realmGranted nominal independence (Dominion status) on 26 September 1907. One of the original Dominions at the time of the Balfour Declaration of 1926 and the Statute of Westminster 1931, although the Statute was not adopted in New Zealand until 1947.[44] Removed final links with the British Parliament in 1986. Removed the final link with the British legal system (Judicial Committee of the Privy Council) in 2003.
 Nigeria1 October 1960AfricaWestern Africa223,804,632Federal presidential republicIncorporated the former British mandate/trust territory of Northern Cameroons on 31 May 1961. Suspended in 1995, suspension lifted in 1999.[45]
 Pakistan14 August 1947[C]AsiaSouthern Asia240,485,658Federal Westminster republicIncludes the city of Gwadar, transferred from Muscat and Oman on 8 September 1958. Included Bangladesh (then known as East Pakistan) until 1971.[12] Left Commonwealth in 1972, rejoined 1990, effective retroactively from October 1989; suspended in 1999, suspension lifted in 2004; again suspended in 2007,[46] suspension lifted in 2008.[47]
 Papua New Guinea16 September 1975OceaniaMelanesia10,329,931Unitary Commonwealth realmGained independence from Australia.
 Rwanda29 November 2009[48]AfricaEastern Africa14,094,683Unitary presidential republicGained independence from Belgium on 1 July 1962. The second country (after Mozambique) to be admitted to the Commonwealth without any former colonial or constitutional links with the United Kingdom.[39] Admitted despite the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI) finding that "the state of governance and human rights in Rwanda does not satisfy Commonwealth standards", and that it "does not therefore qualify for admission".[49]
 Saint Kitts and Nevis[B]19 September 1983AmericasCaribbean47,755Federal Commonwealth realm
 Saint Lucia22 February 1979AmericasCaribbean180,251Unitary Commonwealth realm
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines27 October 1979AmericasCaribbean103,698Unitary Commonwealth realmA special member from 27 October 1979 until 1 June 1985.
 Samoa[B]28 August 1970OceaniaPolynesia225,681Unitary Westminster republicGained independence from New Zealand on 1 January 1962. Joined as Western Samoa, subsequently changing its name to Samoa on 4 July 1997.[50]
 Seychelles28 June 1976AfricaEastern Africa120,622Unitary presidential republic
 Sierra Leone27 April 1961AfricaWestern Africa8,791,092Unitary presidential republic
 Singapore[B]15 October 1965AsiaSouth-eastern Asia5,673,743Unitary Westminster republicGained independence from the United Kingdom and joined Federation of Malaysia on 16 September 1963. Became independent on 9 August 1965.[51] While joining in 1966, the effective date is from its date of independence.[52]
 Solomon Islands7 July 1978OceaniaMelanesia740,424Unitary Commonwealth realm
 South Africa19 November 1926AfricaSouthern Africa60,414,495Unitary parliamentary republic with an executive presidencyGranted nominal independence (Dominion status) on 31 May 1910. One of the original Dominions at the time of the Balfour Declaration of 1926 and Statute of Westminster 1931. Left on 31 May 1961; rejoined 1 June 1994.[53]
 Sri Lanka4 February 1948AsiaSouthern Asia22,037,000Unitary semi-presidential republicJoined as the Dominion of Ceylon, subsequently changing its name in 1972. Became a republic in 1972
 Tanzania9 December 1961AfricaEastern Africa67,438,106Unitary presidential republicTanganyika joined the Commonwealth on 9 December 1961, with the island of Zanzibar following suit later. The two subsequently merged to form Tanzania on 26 April 1964.[54]
 Togo[B]25 June 2022AfricaWestern Africa9,053,799Unitary presidential republicThe country was the formerly French and British mandate territory (later UN trust territory) of Togoland after the First World War in 1919; British Togoland (which would be attached to the Gold Coast in 1956 and become Ghana on 6 March 1957) and French Togoland. Independence of French Togoland as Togo from France on 27 April 1960.[55]
 Tonga4 June 1970OceaniaPolynesia107,773Unitary constitutional monarchy
 Trinidad and Tobago31 August 1962AmericasCaribbean1,534,937Unitary Westminster republicGranted independence on 31 August 1962. Became a republic on 1 August 1976 under the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago Constitution Act 1976, passed by the Parliament of Trinidad and Tobago.
 Tuvalu[B]1 October 1978OceaniaPolynesia11,396Unitary Commonwealth realmA special member from 1 October 1978 until 1 September 2000.[56]
 Uganda9 October 1962AfricaEastern Africa48,582,334Unitary presidential republic
 United Kingdom19 November 1926EuropeNorthern Europe67,184,072Unitary Commonwealth realmBalfour Declaration of 1926 and the Parliament of the United Kingdom enacted the Statute of Westminster 1931. Has four individual nations within the UK: England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales.
 Vanuatu[B]30 July 1980OceaniaMelanesia334,506Unitary Westminster republicGained independence from joint rule (condominium) of France and the United Kingdom.
 Zambia24 October 1964AfricaEastern Africa20,569,737Unitary presidential republic

^ A. Unless otherwise noted, independence was gained from the United Kingdom on the date (shown in column 2) of joining the Commonwealth.
^ B. Not a member of the Commonwealth Foundation.
^ C. Though Pakistan celebrates 14 August 1947 as its independence day, independence was officially granted at midnight, 15 August 1947. Therefore, its date of joining the Commonwealth would be 15 August 1947.
^ D. Geographically a part of Asia, considered a European country in political geography.
^ E. Constitutional monarchy that operates under a Westminster system. The monarch is not the same individual as the British monarch, hence making it not a Commonwealth realm.
^ F. In geology, the Maltese Islands are located on the African Plate. The island group lies approx. 200 km (120 mi) south of the boundary between the African Plate and the Eurasian Plate.[57] In political geography, Malta is considered a European country.

Former member states edit

CountryJoinedUN Continental RegionUN Geographical SubregionLeftNotes
 Ireland19 November 1926EuropeNorthern Europe18 April 1949The Partition of Ireland, in 1921, caused its division into the Irish Free State (later the Republic of Ireland) and Northern Ireland (which remained in the UK). The Irish Free State was one of the original Dominions at the time of the Balfour Declaration of 1926 and the Statute of Westminster 1931.[17] Withdrew after passing the Republic of Ireland Act in 1948, accepted by the United Kingdom in the Ireland Act 1949.[12]
 Zimbabwe18 April 1980AfricaEastern Africa7 December 2003Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence in 1965 was not recognised, but independence as Zimbabwe was recognised on 18 April 1980. Suspended on 19 March 2002.[20] Withdrew voluntarily on 7 December 2003.[58]

On 15 May 2018, President Emmerson Mnangagwa submitted an application to rejoin the Commonwealth.[59]

Dissolved member states edit

Former countryJoinedUN Continental RegionUN Geographical SubregionDissolvedRejoined as a part ofNotes
Malaya31 August 1957AsiaSouth-eastern Asia16 September 1963[31] MalaysiaReformed as the Federation of Malaysia with Singapore (became a separate member in 1965), Sabah, and Sarawak.
Newfoundland19 November 1926AmericasNorthern America31 March 1949  CanadaOne of the original Dominions at the time of the Balfour Declaration of 1926 and the Statute of Westminster 1931. Government suspended on 16 February 1934, merged into Canada on 31 March 1949.[17]
 Tanganyika9 December 1961AfricaEastern Africa26 April 1964 TanzaniaTanganyika and Zanzibar merged to form the United Republic of Tanzania on 26 April 1964.[54]
Zanzibar10 December 1963

Prospective member states edit

CountryAppliedUN Continental RegionUN Geographical SubregionPopulationNotes
 Burundi[60]2013AfricaEastern Africa10,524,117Gained independence from Belgium in 1962. Historically and culturally linked to Commonwealth member Rwanda, once forming a single country Ruanda-Urundi. In 2013, Burundi applied to join the Commonwealth.[61]
 Somaliland2009 (as an observer state)[62]AfricaEastern Africa~3,500,000[G]Somaliland is an unrecognised self-declared sovereign state internationally recognised as a part of Somalia. It has applied to join the Commonwealth under observer status.[62][63] Its borders are approximate to those of British Somaliland, which was a protectorate from 1884 to 1960.
 South Sudan2011[64]AfricaEastern Africa13,670,642Gained independence from Britain as part of Sudan in 1956. Gained independence from Sudan in 2011.[65]
 Suriname[66]2012AmericasSouth America555,934English colony of Surinam from 1650 to 1667 and again controlled by the British from 1799 to 1816; subsequently a Dutch colony. In 2012, Suriname announced plans to join the Commonwealth[67] and the British government has made it a priority to provide guidance to Suriname in applying for Commonwealth membership.[68]
 Zimbabwe2018[69]AfricaEastern Africa16,150,362Under the presidency of Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe dominated Commonwealth affairs, creating acrimonious splits in the organisation. Zimbabwe was suspended in 2002 for breaching the Harare Declaration. In 2003, when the Commonwealth refused to lift the suspension, Zimbabwe withdrew from the Commonwealth. Since then, the Commonwealth has played a major part in trying to end the political impasse and return Zimbabwe to a state of normality. On 15 May 2018, President Mnangagwa submitted an application to rejoin the Commonwealth.[70]

^ G. The population figure is based on 2014 estimates.

Other candidates edit

The Commonwealth of Nations currently has 56 members. Current Commonwealth members (dark blue)
Overseas territories, associated states and crown dependencies (orange)
Suspended members (yellow)
Former members (pink)
Former members applying to rejoin (light blue)
Applicants without historical links to the UK (turquoise)
Other states with historical links to the UK (light green)
Applicants with historical links to the UK (dark green)

Other states which have expressed an interest in joining the Commonwealth over the years include:

CountryUN Continental RegionUN Geographical SubregionSource(s)
 AlgeriaAfricaNorthern Africa[71][72]
 AngolaAfricaMiddle Africa[73][74]
 CambodiaAsiaSouth-eastern Asia[73]
 Cook IslandsOceaniaPolynesia[75]
 IsraelAsiaWestern Asia[73]
 MadagascarAfricaEastern Africa[71][73]
 MyanmarAsiaSouth-eastern Asia[73]
   NepalAsiaSouthern Asia[76][77]
 PalestineAsiaWestern Asia[71][73]
 SudanAfricaNorthern Africa[71][73]
 Timor-LesteAsiaSouth-eastern Asia[73]
 YemenAsiaWestern Asia[71][73]

Howard Henry, former Director of External Relations of the Cook Islands, stated that the Cook Islands could apply for Commonwealth membership as soon as the 2024 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa, following the United States recognition of the Cook Islands and Niue as sovereign states.[75]

The 2007 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting agreed on the core criteria for Membership. An applicant country should have historic constitutional association with an existing Commonwealth members, aside from exceptional circumstances which are only considered on a case-by-case basis.[78][79]

Most Commonwealth member have constitutional links with the United Kingdom and the former British Empire.[80][non-primary source needed] Former British dependencies are eligible to join the Commonwealth providing they agree and commit to the Commonwealth principles, these were laid out in the Singapore Declaration and reaffirmed in the Lusaka Declaration, the Langkawi Declaration and the Harare Declaration.[81][82][71]

See also edit

References edit

External links edit