Argentina’s president presses claim to Falklands
Topics: From the Wires, News
Mike Summers, a member of the Legislative Assembly of the Falkland Islands Government holds up a letter he would like to deliver to the Argentinean delegation as he addresses the Special Committee on the Situation with regard to the Implementation of the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, Thursday, June 14, 2012 at United Nations headquarters. Argentina's president is pressing her country's claim to the Falkland Islands with a high-profile appearance Thursday before a little-known U.N. committee on the 30th anniversary of Britain's ouster of an Argentine invasion force. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)(Credit: AP)UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Argentina’s president took her country’s claim to the Falkland Islands to the United Nations on Thursday, challenging Britain in a highly emotional speech to “act more intelligently” and sit down to talk about the future of the tiny archipelago.
President Cristina Fernandez chose to appear at the annual meeting of the little-known U.N. Decolonization Committee on the 30th anniversary of Britain’s ouster of an Argentine invasion force from the Falklands, using the occasion to reiterate Argentina’s opposition to any more wars and to criticize the British prime minister’s decision to mark the day by flying the Falklands flag over his official 10 Downing Street residence.
“I felt shame from far away for them because wars are not to be celebrated or commemorated,” she said, pointing to the hundreds of deaths in the 74-day conflict over the islands, which Argentina calls Las Malvinas.
While accusing Britain of abusing its power as a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, lying about the islands’ history and acting as “a bully,” Fernandez also said she came to the U.N. “without any rancor.”
“We’re not asking for much,” she said in the first-ever appearance at the committee by a head of state. “We’re just asking to talk. … We’re not asking anyone to say ‘yes’ the Malvinas are Argentina’s.”
Argentina claims Britain has illegally occupied the islands since 1833. Britain disputes Argentina’s claim saying it ignores the wishes of the island’s 3,000 residents who have expressed a desire to remain British. Argentina maintains that the residents do not have the unilateral right to decide what they want the islands to be.
While Fernandez swept into the conference room with a delegation of more than 90 Argentines including ministers and political opponents, the Falklands was represented by the two lawmakers and six young islanders. When Fernandez was introduced, she was applauded and after her lengthy speech she received sustained applause. After the Falklands representatives spoke, there was the usual silence.
Falklands legislator Roger Edwards accused Argentina of seeking to take away the rights of the islanders and subject them to “colonialism.”
“Today all that we ask for is the right to determine our own future without the bullying tactics of a neighboring country,” he said.




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