Jakarta Globe, AFP, Apr 03, 2015
Buenos
Aires. Argentine President Cristina Kirchner said on Thursday she has ordered
the declassification of all secret documents on the 1982 Falklands War with
Britain.
Speaking on
the 33rd anniversary of Argentina’s invasion of the disputed South Atlantic
islands, which it calls the Malvinas, Kirchner said the defense ministry had 30
days to make all files on the conflict public.
She also
used the anniversary — commemorated in Argentina as the Day of the Veterans and
Fallen of the Malvinas Islands War — to criticize Britain’s recent announcement
that it will beef up its defenses in the islands.
Kirchner
said Argentina was determined to gain sovereignty over the islands, but through
peaceful means.
“International
law and dialogue, not militarization, are the path to a reunion and
sovereignty,” she said at a ceremony in the city of Ushuaia, at the southern
tip of South America.
“We will
see the islands form part of our territory again. It’s not just wishful
thinking,” she told an audience that included war veterans in dress uniform.
British
Defense Secretary Michael Fallon last week announced plans to spend 180 million
pounds ($267 million) over 10 years to counter “continuous intimidation” from
Argentina in the Falklands.
Kirchner’s
government condemned the measure as “provocation.”
Argentina
claims it inherited the remote, wind-swept islands from Spain when it gained
independence.
Britain
argues it has historically ruled the islands and that the islanders should have
the right to self-determination. In a 2013 referendum, 99.8 percent voted to
remain a British overseas territory.
The dispute
has flared again in recent years since the discovery of significant oil deposits
off the islands.
The 74-day
Falklands War claimed the lives of 649 Argentine soldiers, 255 British soldiers
and three islanders.
The remains
of 123 Argentines killed in the war have never been identified.
In 2012,
Kirchner asked the International Committee of the Red Cross to mediate with the
British government so DNA samples could be taken from the bodies, which are
buried on the island in graves marked “Argentine soldier known only to God.”
Argentina’s
secretary for the Malvinas, Daniel Filmus, said officials had finished taking
DNA from the soldiers’ relatives for comparison.
“Now we
just need to make progress on the humanitarian aspect,” he said.
Agence France-Presse
Agence France-Presse

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.