Berliner Boersenzeitung - Argentina's Falklands obsession thrives 40 years after war

EUR -
AED 4.315872
AFN 75.794412
ALL 95.6735
AMD 441.168417
ANG 2.103444
AOA 1078.819438
ARS 1603.819398
AUD 1.644592
AWG 2.116801
AZN 1.993043
BAM 1.955233
BBD 2.374822
BDT 144.967995
BGN 1.960328
BHD 0.443338
BIF 3506.073612
BMD 1.175184
BND 1.500604
BOB 8.147639
BRL 5.896013
BSD 1.179173
BTN 109.418365
BWP 15.820618
BYN 3.34903
BYR 23033.615969
BZD 2.371433
CAD 1.609727
CDF 2714.67638
CHF 0.920375
CLF 0.026599
CLP 1046.877718
CNY 8.012114
CNH 8.015875
COP 4237.903294
CRC 537.755624
CUC 1.175184
CUP 31.142389
CVE 110.232591
CZK 24.287653
DJF 209.970054
DKK 7.473128
DOP 70.69072
DZD 155.457161
EGP 60.815683
ERN 17.627767
ETB 184.108154
FJD 2.615079
FKP 0.868988
GBP 0.871229
GEL 3.174623
GGP 0.868988
GHS 13.029169
GIP 0.868988
GMD 86.378756
GNF 10345.398547
GTQ 9.01731
GYD 246.687472
HKD 9.204415
HNL 31.328922
HRK 7.533754
HTG 154.409201
HUF 361.990939
IDR 20183.969863
ILS 3.510218
IMP 0.868988
INR 109.328
IQD 1544.652434
IRR 1553006.301527
ISK 143.59549
JEP 0.868988
JMD 186.426776
JOD 0.833232
JPY 186.803212
KES 151.775044
KGS 102.769647
KHR 4716.753721
KMF 491.227363
KPW 1057.656825
KRW 1735.030433
KWD 0.362298
KYD 0.982615
KZT 552.879802
LAK 26011.696298
LBP 105589.105371
LKR 372.712006
LRD 216.955291
LSL 19.323945
LTL 3.470014
LVL 0.710857
LYD 7.455871
MAD 10.878948
MDL 20.266972
MGA 4890.645351
MKD 61.650219
MMK 2467.214219
MNT 4200.724314
MOP 9.511244
MRU 47.130146
MUR 54.540791
MVR 18.168213
MWK 2044.633661
MXN 20.401908
MYR 4.650791
MZN 75.158971
NAD 19.326
NGN 1583.361798
NIO 43.389089
NOK 11.040149
NPR 175.071273
NZD 2.00292
OMR 0.451872
PAB 1.179158
PEN 4.056625
PGK 5.111715
PHP 70.499229
PKR 328.766238
PLN 4.233737
PYG 7511.855387
QAR 4.298718
RON 5.0983
RSD 117.349203
RUB 89.648817
RWF 1722.908115
SAR 4.408351
SBD 9.443368
SCR 17.505482
SDG 706.286593
SEK 10.799299
SGD 1.495775
SHP 0.877394
SLE 28.938917
SLL 24643.02662
SOS 673.907601
SRD 44.311511
STD 24323.946218
STN 24.493841
SVC 10.317011
SYP 129.913682
SZL 19.320648
THB 37.752802
TJS 11.118884
TMT 4.119022
TND 3.422079
TOP 2.829562
TRY 52.736492
TTD 8.008679
TWD 37.041231
TZS 3061.855058
UAH 51.910122
UGX 4366.716157
USD 1.175184
UYU 46.90601
UZS 14308.853984
VES 563.685433
VND 30946.133128
VUV 137.485333
WST 3.190845
XAF 655.76978
XAG 0.014727
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.175995
XCG 2.125084
XDR 0.815574
XOF 655.76978
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.401468
ZAR 19.27361
ZMK 10578.071092
ZMW 22.432786
ZWL 378.408926
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    22.77

    +0.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.5600

    17.66

    +3.17%

  • CMSD

    0.1800

    23.08

    +0.78%

  • NGG

    -0.6000

    86.92

    -0.69%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    100.15

    +0.44%

  • VOD

    -0.2200

    15.48

    -1.42%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    36.68

    +1.28%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    24.09

    -0.29%

  • AZN

    4.3300

    204.8

    +2.11%

  • GSK

    1.2200

    58.35

    +2.09%

  • BCC

    4.2400

    83.04

    +5.11%

  • BTI

    0.5400

    56.68

    +0.95%

  • BP

    -3.0400

    44.59

    -6.82%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    13.09

    +1.38%

Argentina's Falklands obsession thrives 40 years after war
Argentina's Falklands obsession thrives 40 years after war

Argentina's Falklands obsession thrives 40 years after war

Whether it is found in children's school books, on bank notes, murals and road signs, tattooed on people's bodies or even as an article in the constitution, Argentina's claim to the Falkland Islands is a national obsession.

Text size:

Forty years since Argentina launched its disastrous invasion of the tiny South Atlantic archipelago, which covers 12,000 square kilometers (4,600 square miles), the political powers in the South American country show no signs of giving up hope of somehow claiming the islands, as well as the island of South Georgia.

"The recovery of the said territories and the full exercise of sovereignty... constitute a permanent and irrevocable objective of the Argentine people," says the Constitution, written in 1994.

Lying about 300 miles (480 kilometers) from the Argentine coast, the rocky wind-beaten islands are home to 3,500 mostly British people, some of whom can trace their ancestry on the islands back 10 generations.

It is officially a British Overseas Territory, but Argentina claims that the islands should be theirs.

And wherever you travel in Argentina, there are constant reminders of the state policy: signs proclaiming "Las Malvinas son Argentinas," using the Spanish name for the Falklands and asserting ownership.

Murals also show the shape of the islands, often painted in the sky blue of the Argentine flag and with the words "We will return" emblazoned next to it -- a reference to the Argentine belief that it once had a settlement in the islands.

In many towns and cities, road signs specify the distance to the Falklands.

Every April 2, a day marking the Argentine invasion, school children sing the official 1941 hymn claiming the islands.

- Falklands bring Argentines together -

Throughout the country, football stadiums, towns, hundreds of roads and even the 50 pesos bill carry the name "Argentine Malvinas."

"Argentina is a complex country with many cracks, there are few issues that" bring people together, said Edgardo Esteban, director of the Malvinas Museum in Buenos Aires.

"The Falklands is one, it's like the national football team."

In a 2021 survey of 5,000 people, more than 81 percent said the country should continue to claim sovereignty over the islands. Only 10 percent said it should stop.

Governments also have been keen to continue, although not always in the same way.

Argentina has clung to a non-binding 1965 United Nations resolution that recognized a sovereignty dispute, dating back to the 1830s, and invited the Argentine and UK governments to negotiate a solution.

The South American country has been less enthusiastic to acknowledge the right to self-determination enshrined in the UN Charter -- and which the Falkland islanders exercised in 2013 when 99.8 percent of them voted to remain British.

Argentina long sought to achieve its claims by diplomatic means, but that was dramatically abandoned by the military dictatorship in its ill-fated 1982 invasion.

- 'A national claim' -

"What Europe cannot understand is how a people could hail the dictators" following the invasion, the 1980 Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Perez Esquivel said recently.

"It was very difficult to explain that the Falklands were a national claim and not support for the dictatorship."

Following the war, which ended on June 14 with Argentina's surrender to a British expeditionary force sent by the government, there was a period when the issue was put on the back burner.

Diplomatic and commercial relations were reestablished in 1989, while the Argentines adopted an unsuccessful policy of trying to seduce the "kelpers," as the islands' inhabitants are known.

"But since 1982, the discourse on the Falklands has remained a prisoner to the scars of the war," said Esteban.

The Peronist governments of Nestor and Cristina Kirchner (2003-2015) used the Falklands issue as a rallying cry to drum up support, whereas the liberal Mauricio Macri (2015-2019) showed far less interest.

At the Malvinas Museum, created in 2014 under the government of Cristina Kirchner, the nationalist narrative is nourished for future generations.

And while the museum does mention the war, it prefers to focus on "geological unity," the "continental maritime shelf" or the pioneering presence of Argentine scientists in Antarctica to push its claims.

It even talks about elephant seals that have been traced making journeys between the islands and the South American continent.

Proof, it would seem, that even aquatic mammals support the Argentine claim to the Falklands.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)