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Argentina seeks Falklands negotiations with UK

January 4, 2016

The new government in Buenos Aires has invited the UK to resume talks aimed at settling the Falklands sovereignty dispute "fairly and definitively." The UK has controlled the islands, claimed by Argentina, since 1833.

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View of the city from the jetty of Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands
Image: Getty Images/AFP/D. Garcia

Argentina is firmly committed to "peacefully settling its differences" and to "international law and multilateralism," the nation's Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

The statement confirmed that the new Argentinean government would continue to press its territorial claim on the Falkland Islands, with the conflict remaining the key stumbling block between Buenos Aires and London.

The administration "invites the United Kingdom to resume, as soon as possible, the negotiations aimed at settling the sovereignty dispute over the Malvinas [Falklands] islands, South Georgia, South Sandwich islands and surrounding territorial seas fairly and definitively," the ministry said.

Residents support staying with UK

The United Kingdom has ruled the Falklands since 1833, even though the islands are located only 300 miles (480 kilometers) off Argentina's coast. Argentina claims that it inherited the remote archipelago when it gained independence from Spain in 1816.

In 1982, the Argentinean military junta deployed troops to take over the islands by force, sparking a two-month war between Argentina and the UK. The conflict ended with a British victory and the death of 649 Argentinean soldiers and 255 British troops.

Magellanic penguins on Carcass Island
The islands lie almost 13,000 kilometers (around 8,000 miles) southwest of the UKImage: imago/blickwinkel

Almost 99 percent of the Falklands' population voted to stay part of the UK in a 2013 referendum.

Last spring, secret documents published by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed that the UK spied on Argentinean leaders between 2006 and 2011. British security services also used the Internet to spread pro-British propaganda, in order to prevent Buenos Aires from seizing the islands.

The UK boosted its military presence on the archipelago in 2015.

dj/cmk (AFP, dpa)