Mago Island
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Lau Islands
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Islands of Fiji
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Mago Island (pronounced [maŋo]) lies in the northwest sector of Fiji's northern Lau Group of islands. One of the largest Private islands in the southwestern pacific, the pristine island consists of 22 square kilometres (8.4 square miles) of land.
Mago is located 166 statute miles ENE of the Fiji capital of Suva and 14 miles SW of the tiny island of Namalata, near Vanua Balavu, where descendants of original Mago inhabitants still reside. Mago Island is relatively undeveloped at present and inhabited only by a few caretakers of Indo-Fijian descent. During the 1860s a cotton plantation established by the Ryder brothers of Australia flourished there. The Ryders were succeeded by the Borron family who ran a successful copra plantation on the island for many years and donated Borron House, an historic mansion in the Fiji capital city Suva, to the Fiji Government.
In early 2005 Mago Island was purchased by Hollywood actor/director Mel Gibson for $15 million from Japan's Tokyu Corporation. Descendants of original native inhabitants of Mago, who were displaced in the 1860s, have protested Gibson's purchase.