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WAR REPORT
Proudly British, Falklanders eye independence
by Staff Writers
Stanley, Falkland Islands (AFP) April 2, 2012

Britain condemns Argentinian Falklands protests
London (AFP) April 3, 2012 - Britain on Monday slammed Argentinian protesters who threw rocks and Molotov cocktails at police outside the British embassy in Buenos Aires in a demonstration over the disputed Falkland Islands.

Several protesters were slightly hurt in the demonstration, which coincided with the 30th anniversary of Argentina's invasion of the South Atlantic archipelago, police said.

"We condemn the violent actions of a minority during today's demonstration," a Foreign Office statement said Monday.

"All states are obliged under the Vienna Convention to provide appropriate protection for foreign diplomatic missions," it added.

"We expect the Argentine Government to continue to fulfill its obligations under the convention and continue fully to enforce the law against any demonstrators committing criminal acts.

The department praised the "dedication and professionalism" of Argentinian police, who used tear gas and blasts from a water cannon to quell the protests.

Argentina and Britain both marked the landmark anniversary, with Argentine President Cristina Kirchner calling British rule over the disputed islands "absurd."

The 1982 invasion triggered a 74-day war, which ended in a humiliating defeat for Argentina after British prime minister Margaret Thatcher sent in a naval task force to reclaim the archipelago that Britain has ruled since 1833.


Falkland islanders have been British since the war between Britain and Argentina 30 years ago, but with the promise of oil on the horizon they do not rule out independence.

"Now we want to be British, but maybe the next generation in the use of their self-determination decides that it's better to be independent," Jan Cheek, a member of the islands' legislative assembly, told AFP.

The islands are currently a British Overseas Territory with London in charge of its defense and international relations and all the rest falling under the legislative assembly.

It costs Britain about $180 million a year to defend the archipelago, which the local government could easily absorb if the promise of oil reserves in its offshore waters materializes.

A stroll through Stanley leaves no doubt who the kelpers, as the islanders are known, identify with, 30 years after the war over the South Atlantic archipelago that began April 2, 1982 and cost the lives of 649 Argentine troops and 255 British servicemen.

The big 4x4 vehicles seen everywhere here fly the Falklands flag and bear bumper stickers that read: "Falkland Islands. British to the core," and, "We are British and we are proud."

But no one consulted by AFP rejected the idea of independence, mainly due to the reports of an oil windfall in the offing.

"Now we are British and we are happy like this, we'll see what happens with oil and then we'll know," said Steve, a kelper who asked that his full name not be used.

If one thing is clear, they do not have much love for Argentina and its claim to the islands.

"We hope that the Argentine government can move on, and recognizes our right to live here as Falkland Islanders," said Stephen Luxton, director of mineral resources for the Falklands Islands government.

Both Luxton and Cheek referred several times to the Falklands as "our country."

But speaking of "country" in the case of the Falklands, or Malvinas as it is known in Spanish, opens a Pandora's box of international law.

Eduardo Barcesat, a legal expert and adviser to the Argentine government, told AFP that neither Argentina nor the United Nations would recognize a declaration of independence by the Falklands.

"The UN has valuable and applicable precedents, which determine that you can't apply the self-determination right when the local population is a consequence of a colonialist territorial conquest," he said.

"The UN never entitled the kelpers to be a part in the sovereignty debate," Barcesat added.

So the Falklands could wind up in the position of Kosovo, which declared independence from Serbia in 2008 and today is recognized by about 80 countries and still has not applied for UN membership.

Washington Baliero, a professor of international law at the Universidad de la Republica in Uruguay, believes that Britain could consent to independence in an agreement with the islanders.

He told AFP that the Falklands case is unique, one that does not fall neatly under either decolonization or self-determination.

"As far as decolonization goes, it is not a non-European people outside the metropolis and subject to colonial rule," he said. "The kelpers are British citizens and of British origin."

"And the self-determination principle was designed for a colonized people. Kelpers' opinion is important anyway, but it isn't a pure and simple self-determination case," he added.

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South Americans at UN to back Argentina's Falklands claim
New York (AFP) April 2, 2012 - The head of the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) meets with UN chief Ban Ki-moon Monday to deliver most of the continent's support for Argentina in its row with Britain over the Falklands.

The move comes on the 30th anniversary of an Argentine invasion of the disputed islands, which set off a bloody 74 day war with Britain that ended with their restoration to British control.

In a largely symbolic gesture, UNASUR Secretary General Maria Emma Mejia was to meet with Ban to deliver a statement of support for Buenos Aires' claim to the South Atlantic archipelago.

Tensions between London and Buenos Aires have flared anew since 2010, when Britain authorized oil companies to explore for oil in Falklands waters, and have sharpened with the deployment of a British warship to the islands.

Britain said Monday it will send another warship to the South Atlantic this week, the HMS Dauntless, a destroyer based in Portsmouth, southern England.

The spokesman said the warship departs Wednesday on the six month deployment.

The windswept Falklands -- population around 3,000 -- are located some 400 nautical miles from the coast of Argentina, which calls the islands the Malvinas and considers them an integral part of its national territory.

The islands have been controlled by Britain since 1833.

The United Nations decolonization branch has called on London to open a dialogue on the islands, but Britain has refused.



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