The Citizen (KZN)

Cameron’s visit sparks ‘provocatio­n’

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– Foreign Secretary David Cameron visited the Falkland Islands on Monday, prompting claims of “provocatio­n” from an Argentine regional official on the first such trip in three decades to the far-flung UK territory claimed by the South American nation.

Cameron said he was visiting the South Atlantic archipelag­o at the centre of a 1982 war between the two nations to make clear the territory was “a valued part of the British family”.

Britain’s Press Associatio­n reported Cameron as saying Britain would “help protect and defend” the islands for as long as they want to be “part of the UK family”.

“And I hope that’s for a very, very long time, possibly forever,” he added.

Gustavo Melella, governor of Argentina’s Tierra del Fuego, Antarctica and Southern Atlantic Islands province, said on X that Cameron’s presence “constitute­s a new British provocatio­n that seeks to undermine our legitimate sovereign rights over our territorie­s and to sustain colonialis­m in the 21st century”.

The Falklands, known as Islas Malvinas in Argentina, are about 480km from mainland Argentina, which claims to have inherited them from Spain when it gained independen­ce.

Britain insists it has historical­ly ruled the Falklands and notes that islanders voted 99.8% in favour of remaining British in a 2013 referendum.

A conflict over the territory in 1982 claimed the lives of 255 British and 649 Argentine soldiers and three islanders.

Argentina’s new president Javier Milei – who met Cameron last month in Davos – has said he hopes to recover the islands diplomatic­ally.

But ahead of his visit, Cameron insisted sovereignt­y was nonnegotia­ble while the Falklands residents wish to remain British.

“The Falkland Islands are a valued part of the British family,” he told the PA, which went with him to the archipelag­o 12 875km from Britain.

“And we are clear that as long as they want to remain part of the family, the issue of sovereignt­y will not be up for discussion,” Cameron said.

Milei has suggested London should approach the issue in a way similar to the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997. –

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