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Falkland Islands Anniversary: Argentina Demands Handover Of 'Las Malvinas' 30 Years After War

By BRIAN HENDRIE 04/ 2/12 04:36 PM ET AP

Falkland Islands Anniversary
People walk past the Malvinas Falklands war Memorial in Ushuaia, Argentina, Sunday, April 1, 2012. April 2 marks the thirtieth anniversary of the military confrontation when the country was defeated by the United Kingdom for the remote archipelago in the South Atlantic, the Falkland Islands, known as the Malvinas by the Argentines. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

USHUAIA, Argentina — Argentina's president said Monday that she's asked the International Red Cross to persuade Britain to let its DNA experts identify unknown soldiers buried in the Falkland Islands.

Thirty years after Argentina and Britain went to war over the remote South Atlantic archipelago, Cristina Fernandez says universal human rights demand that both countries work together to give those remains back to their families.

Her much-anticipated speech on the anniversary of Argentina's April 2, 1982 invasion of the islands was focused on promoting dialogue and understanding. She said her government sets a global standard for protecting human rights and vowed to "respect the interests of the islanders" as Argentina seeks to peacefully regain control.

"We don't have war drums, nor do we wear military helmets. Our only helmets are those of construction workers, working for the inclusion of all," she said at the city's Monument to the Fallen, honoring the 649 Argentines who died in the conflict.

Despite attention-grabbing images of protesters burning a Union Jack flag and a soldier in effigy outside the British embassy on Monday, polls show zero appetite among Argentines for a military solution.

Prime Minister David Cameron said in London earlier Monday that Britain had to come to the islanders' defense in 1982, and will do so again if anyone tries to deprive them of their liberty. The 74-day occupation ended when British troops routed the ill-prepared Argentines in hard-fought trench warfare. In all, 255 British soldiers and three islanders were killed.

Fernandez called Cameron's statement absurd and ridiculous, noting that Argentines were also deprived of their liberty at the time, living under a 1976-1983 dictatorship, supported by outside powers, that had kidnapped and killed thousands of its own people.

"I am proud of having made promoting human rights one of the pillars of our state," she said. For this reason, it's impossible to consider that Argentina would not also protect the rights of the 3,000 islanders, she argued.

Britain has refused Argentina's repeated calls to negotiate the islands' sovereignty, saying it's up to the islanders to decide. Before, during and after the 1982 conflict, the islanders have overwhelmingly said they want to maintain British protection.

For about a year now, Argentina has been intensifying its campaign to pressure Britain into sovereignty talks, a theme it pushes in every international forum. Argentina's historical claim to the islands Latin America knows as Las Malvinas has support across the region, and got moral backing last week from a group of Nobel Peace Prize winners who scolded Britain for ignoring U.N. resolutions urging talks.

Argentina has tried seemingly every way possible to pressure Britain short of armed conflict. The government has closed off shipping routes and air space. Unions have refused to unload British cargo or accept British-flagged cruise ships. Fernandez's ministers have sought to close off British imports, sue British investors and banks, and block oil development off the islands' shores.

It adds up to an "economic war" that has made life difficult, but Argentina seems to be running out of leverage and is no closer to recovering the territory that fell under British control in 1833, said Dick Sawle, a member of Falkland Islands legislative assembly.

"I think that Brazil, Uruguay and Chile will see what they're missing in the Falklands, and at that point it just becomes a lot of shouting across the water that can be ignored," Sawle added.

As for identifying the war dead, Sawle said last month that his government would await a formal proposal before commenting.

While the president explicitly sought to reassure islanders several times in Monday's speech, feelings on both sides have hardened.

"Penguin News" Editor Lisa Watson said she tries to find the right tone as she responds to hate mail through public Twitter messages. But it didn't help when Argentines discovered that the newspaper's photo of Fernandez had been saved under a crude insult.

"It never occurred to us that the filename would be so transparent. It was hugely embarrassing, particularly now as we were seemingly winning the image war," Watson's colleague John Fowler said. "Before that, Lisa had been pretty continuously receiving hundreds and hundreds of nasty sexually insulting messages a day."

Argentina has variously tried to charm, occupy, negotiate and threaten its way back into the islands. In the 1970s, it established a direct air link with Buenos Aires, supplied them with gasoline and paid to educate island children. For Britain, the island had become a burden; it was pushing islanders to accept a Hong Kong-style handover before the junta decided to invade.

For many islanders and Argentines, those 74 days of armed occupation provided their only glimpse of each others' lives.

Other attempts to build ties in the 1990s included agreements on shared fishing and oil rights, shipping and air links and other exchanges, but nearly all were abandoned under Fernandez and her late husband Nestor Kirchner, who have sought to isolate the islands instead.

"Thirty years and now we find it again, we are worried we are going to go through it all again, another invasion," islander Mary Lou Agman said at Sunday's commemorative march in Stanley by the small Falkland Islands Defense Force.

Islanders should relax, because another invasion will never happen, said James Peck, an islander with dual Falklands-Argentine nationality after marrying an Argentine and moving to Buenos Aires, said he saw the pre-anniversary war of words "fueling itself and becoming hysterical."

"Someone has to speak out for common sense," he said. "For me Argentina has real dignity these days, and I'm amazed that grown up politicians cannot sit down and talk civilly to each other. I think that's really sad. Not everybody's getting stoked up by all this."

Riot police outside the British embassy fired tear gas and blue-painted water from a cannon at protesters wielding slingshots and throwing bottles of burning liquid. But outside this small group, Argentines from across the political spectrum endorsed the pacifist response.

"The soveriegnty campaign seems correct to me. I don't think there's any other road but the diplomatic one, although I don't have confidence in anything this government does," said Martin Dhers, who joined a solemn crowd outside the Buenos Aires war memorial.

Yearning for common ground, several veterans were holding a quiet ceremony at the Argentine war cemetery in the islands, on a lonely bluff near the scene of one of the most intense battles.

"To return to this little piece of land, which for me is a little bit of my country and apart from that, being here is so pleasing, to be among the people that were once our enemies, that which we can now live together with – it's just really proof that we human beings are not like animals," said Juan Carlos Lujan.

___

Paul Byrne contributed from Stanley, Falkland Islands, and Michael Warren and Alejo Miranda Sanguinetti contributed from Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Follow Warren on Twitter at http://twitter.com/mwarrenap

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A child plays at the Malvinas Falklands war Memorial in Ushuaia, Argentina, Sunday, April 1, 2012. April 2 marks the thirtieth anniversary of the military confrontation when the country was defeated by the United Kingdom for the remote archipelago in the South Atlantic, the Falkland Islands, known as the Malvinas by the Argentines. (AP)

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USHUAIA, Argentina — Argentina's president said Monday that she's asked the International Red Cross to persuade Britain to let its DNA experts identify unknown soldiers buried in the Falkland Is...
USHUAIA, Argentina — Argentina's president said Monday that she's asked the International Red Cross to persuade Britain to let its DNA experts identify unknown soldiers buried in the Falkland Is...
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11:58 PM on 04/17/2012
The only reason that there is a military base on the Falkland Islands is because the Argentine military invaded the Falkland Islands in 1982. The subsequent response to protect the islanders from future invasion was to place the base there. I find it silly to read arguments that the UK has 'militarized' the islands. Argentina was and is the root cause of this situation. Argentina's Conquest of the Desert campaign in the 1870s killed tens of thousands of native Patagonians, their invasion of the Falkland Islands in 1982 led to 1,000 deaths, and somehow those who support their continued threats use some 1833 expultion of a military garrison that led to no deaths as some unforgivable act. Wow. And just to set the record straight, Argentinians are allowed to visit the Falkland Islands, and do so quite regularly.
08:38 AM on 04/10/2012
Funny how the Argentine president mentions the years of opression for her people under the military junta and yet fails to recognise that it was the British victory that removed the Junta from power... obviously not blessed with the greatest of intelligence is Mrs Kirchener. Im not sure why she thinks going against international law (the right of the islanders to choose who governs them) will gain any real support (apart from a few has been Hollywood actors with very anti British roots ). A bit of a deflection from the problems of her government perhaps ? All a little silly really - There is no problem to discuss as the islands are a British protectorate and will remain so for as long as the islanders want it. For the UN to suggest that Britain and Argentina must sit down and talk is also rather ridiculous - Then again the UN are a rather ridiculous, toothless organisation anyway (Bosnia, Rwanda etc etc).
10:09 AM on 04/11/2012
That´s right, if Argentina had won the war, militaries would still be governing, and Thatcher´s administration would have been a lot shorter. However, the territory of the islands belongs to Argentina, the present inhabitants form a british COLONY which is closed to immigration from the country they belong to, Argentina. If immigration was allowed, argentines would soon outnumber the british, and the self determination of the population would be no argument for England. England has kept that territory captive just to ensure further invasions to the south american continent and gain access to Antarctica to pursue its long gone dream of colonialism. That´s why all latin american countries support the argentine claim, as do many other UN members. If you despise the UN opinion, maybe it´s because it goes against your position, you would consider it important if they supported England, which is not the case.
01:33 PM on 04/09/2012
I don't think the Argentines understand the British mind set. If you try to pressure them into giving up their claim to the Falklands, the exact opposite happens. If you try to hurt them economically, this only drives them together and stiffens their resolve. The more harsh the actions of Argentina, the more intransigent the British become. They do not cave to international pressure when they feel they are right, and it is one of their qualities that I admire most.
10:11 AM on 04/11/2012
Stubbornness is not a quality to admire, specially when you are not right. If Argentina just let the situation be, it won´t change.
12:03 AM on 04/18/2012
Argentina ... please do the right thing and correct a historical wrong ... return Patagonia to the the desendants of the native populations that remain. Free Patagonia.
08:44 PM on 04/03/2012
the president of argentina, has no need to ask the ReInternational Red Cross to persuade Britain to let its DNA experts identify unknown soldiers buried in the Falkland Islands.

No need to...

All she has to do is ask the Falkland Islands Government.

Kindest regards from the Falkland Islands

Deanstreet
07:14 AM on 04/04/2012
Oh, and while you've over here, clean up the thousands of unmapped land mines you left behind.
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06:05 PM on 04/03/2012
"polls show zero appetite among Argentines for a military solution."
Laudable.
Having their behinds handed to them on a platter MAY have something to do with it.
05:26 PM on 04/03/2012
tell the argies to go pxss into the wind where soverinty of the Falklands are concerned ! BUT as to the unidentified dead thats another matter ,every combatant no matter what country they come from deserve to go home,if when I was in a combat situation i had not made it,my last wish would have been take my remains home so my famly can have closure,& that also goes for their own,let DNA take place & repatriate all those identified,show these soldiers some who were only just in their teens the respect ALL combatants deserve,although i lost friends during that conflict I have no ill feelings against them as they were doing the same as our own "FOLLOWING ORDERS"but that does not mean i am prepared to forgive the ruleing junta or for that matter the present government for trying to reserect a conflict 30 years old,especialy with the subtle threats they keep releasing into the medias laps
05:09 PM on 04/03/2012
If Argentina acquired the Falkland Islands, they would simply turn their attention to something else ... a land dispute with Chile, a land dispute with Paraguay, one of their claims to the Antarctic Penninsula ... it wouldn't stop. This is Nationalism in the old-school European form. Argentina is driven by Nationalism in wanting to acquire a small tiny, historically non-Argentine community at the extreme end of South America. Its about maturity as a nation. The United States is not attempting to claim Bermuda, for example, because they have matured past this Nationalist phase. Argentina has not.
09:59 AM on 04/11/2012
All argentine land disputes with neighbour countries have been settled after democracy was recovered in South America. The only dispute remaining is the british colony/military base in the Malvinas. Argentina is located at the extreme end of South America, the maturity as a nation will be complete when the stolen territory is restored to the country it belongs to.
09:22 PM on 04/12/2012
Well, that is a little deceiving. Argentina is also located about half-way up the continent. It is a very long country with the vast majority of its inhabitants living in the northern portion of the country. The portion of Argentina that is located near the Falkland Islands is similar to Alaska in the United States. But the good news is that the Falkland Islands are anything but a 'military base'. It is a thriving self-sustaining community populated by generations of Falkland Islanders. The military base, unfortunately, is the by-product of the Argentine invasion of 1982. No invasion, or threat of invasion, and the base goes away. What Argentina should really focus on is restoring the wrong that was created in the 1870s with the 'Conquest of the Desert', when Argentina was bent on conquering the native tribes in Patagonia ... essentially stealing their lands. Once this stolen territory is restored to the decendants of these lost tribes, then Argentina could focus on the Falkland Islands ... a nation first settled by France and England.
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Epilef2000
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04:27 PM on 04/03/2012
A modern day, mini version of the Palestinian/Isareali conflict. However during the Flakland War the US, and the dictatorship of Pinochet helped Britain, while Israel's Mossad helped Argentina.
11:20 AM on 04/03/2012
England should never give up the Falklands. And they should never have given up the Suez canal, just as America should never have given up the Panama Canal.
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04:26 PM on 04/03/2012
WHAT? WHY?
11:09 AM on 04/03/2012
Let me get this straight. Argentina pulled off a surprise invasion 30 years ago probably to take the minds of the people of the disasterous political situation at the time, an invasion supported overwhelmingly by the Argentine public and now they want the Brits to hand the islands over to them. And what a surpise, all this while an Argentinian president is stirring up popularity for herself. Sound familiar?
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Epilef2000
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04:13 PM on 04/03/2012
Thatcher was also facing riots in 1981, with unpopular rating falling down to 23% approval rating, and failed economic policies that brought about a recession. The Falklands are a net deficit for England but the war gave Thatcher an opportunity to muster 'nationalist pride, and with Englands superior militaty and navy, easily defeated the Argentines, and she called for elections whichshe easily won. War is a great deception to foster patrotism and deflect criticism from a recession, bad policies and unpopularity.
02:27 AM on 04/04/2012
So what Thatcher won the election, that's nothing to do with the reason for the war, that's a result of the war
07:31 AM on 04/04/2012
Very clouded view of the skirmish, Epilef.
Thatcher went to war because if she didn't then ''the country she woke up to the next day would be fundamentally changed forever.''
It was about principle, patriotism and determination.
I don't know where you got the illusion it was 'an easy victory.' Defeat was the expected outcome in most quarters. The Soviets in particular were in awe of the victory, and worried by it. Not only had a NATO country gone to war and achieved victory against all odds, but they had done so for- principle.
10:33 AM on 04/03/2012
I demanded these islands be handed over to me weeks ago! I get them first then you can have them Argentina! I just want to play with the penguins. If I can teach just one of them to fetch, it will catch on because they are very social creatures and I will be famous. Very famous.
10:19 AM on 04/03/2012
Fernandez has a sick mind. The Spanish left the islands in 1811 and the British set up a settlement in 1833 and have never left. I hope the British use nuclear weapons if Argentina attacks again.
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Epilef2000
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04:15 PM on 04/03/2012
For irrelevant island that is used as political pawns by the Argentines and Englsih--neither country really cares about those people--itsmthe potential petroleum that really matters--you seem tto advocate excesssive force to put it kindly.
07:40 AM on 04/04/2012
Still cloudy on the facts.
If you think political pandering justifies the huge sums of money spent protecting from a proven aggressor, then you are mistaken.
The Falklanders have the right to self-determination. Period.
Potential oil? Where was that issue 30 years ago during the war? Where was it 10 years ago? 5 years ago?
The Argentinians would be better advised to get their inflation down from 35% and pay its multi-billion dollar debts.
09:28 PM on 04/04/2012
The argentines declared the islands as part of the territory immediately after indepence in 1810, and populated the islands from 1820 to 1833 until the brits expulsed us. The islands were not deserted in 1833.
10:20 PM on 04/04/2012
Whatever, the debate has been resolved so go pound sand. And, if Argentina wants a war, I hope the Brits vaporize your fleet this time with an ICBM topped with a nuclear warhead.
09:37 AM on 04/03/2012
Give it back to it's natives The PENGUINS"S
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gerry978
12:04 AM on 04/04/2012
No, no, no.....first the UN musy debate resolutions for at least 5 years with Russia and China vetoing everything except providing the Falklands with general GAO chicken and borscht for humanitarian easons. Next the US needs to take the lead in assisting the UN I. Establlishing a multinational peacekeeping force to be stationed on a nearby ice berg. The US will provide lots of troops and drones, Britain will provide a boatload of undetonated mines donated by Camilla Bowles who found them while doing a little spring cleaning at the castle. Sarah Palin (she knows frigid) will be dispatched to conduct a fact finding mission, although she stated she would prefer to be on the front lines, armed. A transitional government assistance team will be formed: Marc Arrubio and Dame Edna will serve as cultural attaches, Jan Brewer will advise on immigration and presidential protocol, Bernie Medow will be given a brief release to assist in economic matters.

Finally, Ricky will bomb the entire place killing everyone and Mittens will then baptize them all.

The end.
07:41 AM on 04/04/2012
Dame Edna has passed away.
08:18 AM on 04/03/2012
The following countries and international organizations support Argentina's claim over the Malvinas Islands (Falkland Islands):

Peru, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, China, the Union of South American Nations, the Andean Community, the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, and Mercosur.
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10:25 AM on 04/03/2012
and I.
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WillieBlack
11:09 AM on 04/03/2012
That'll make all the difference, Gumby.
11:21 AM on 04/03/2012
You foget that Britain wanted to refer the matter to the World Court. Argentina refused. That says it all.
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04:30 PM on 04/03/2012
WORLD HIGH court located in US? in UN ? hm, hm, hm....
07:56 AM on 04/03/2012
Here's an idea, let Argentina's president, the protestors and any other knucklehead who wants to fight and die for land, have at it. Let the soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines sit this one out. I'll bet you a billion dollars that all that saber rattling will fade away in minutes if the politicians and civilians had to bleed and die for a cause that they decided to fight for. Semper Fi...
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08:17 AM on 04/03/2012
NEGOTIATIONS is the word.
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06:14 PM on 04/03/2012
You'll need to convince the Argentinians to change their constitution first.