British and Argentinian leaders clash over Falklands
MEXICO: Argentina's President Cristina Kirchner and
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron clashed publicly at the G20 summit on
Tuesday over the future of the disputed Falkland Islands.
Argentinian officials branded the British leader a
"colonialist" in dismissing Kirchner's call for talks on the
sovereignty of the islands, while Cameron said he had been attempting to
counter Argentina's "propaganda".
The pair came face-to-face at the meeting of the world's
major economies in Mexico, at a time when tensions between their countries were
already running high just days after the 30th anniversary of the Falklands War.
Cameron urged Kirchner to respect the will of the 3,000
residents on the South Atlantic islands, who want to remain British. Kirchner
countered him by citing UN resolutions calling for sovereignty negotiations.
"The president had the UN resolutions and she said to Cameron: 'Let's
respect the United Nations'," Argentina's Foreign Minister Hector
Timmerman said.
"The Prime Minister refused to accept the documents,
turned his back and walked away without a farewell," he added, accusing
Britain of disrespecting UN resolutions and of retaining an imperialist
mindset.
"After years of acting as a colonial power they have
forgotten that they are responsible for the existence of colonialism, and that
it is countries like Argentina that defeated most of the colonial projects in
the world," he said.
Cameron confirmed he approached Kirchner in order to urge
her to respect the right of Falkland Islanders to choose their own future in an
upcoming referendum that is expected to show overwhelming opposition to
Argentinian rule.
"We should be clear that because there's a referendum
there's an opportunity for those countries in the world who have not looked at
this issue for a while and have perhaps accepted some of the propaganda put
around by Argentina or its supporters to look again at this issue and recognize
that the people of these islands should be able to determine their own
future," he said.
"It's an important point to make to the Argentine
president and an important point to make more widely and that's exactly why I
did what I did." A Downing Street source, speaking on condition of
anonymity, confirmed that there had been a tense exchange, but downplayed the
allegation that Cameron had refused to accept a packet of documents from
Kirchner. "He took it up to her to make those points. She took that badly
and that was basically it," she said.
AFP
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