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Piñera denies any problems with Argentina over Patagonian glaciers in unmarked border

Tuesday, October 23rd 2018 - 07:43 UTC
Full article 2 comments
Piñera said that “we have a very good relationship with Argentina” and that the border incident “does not affect or alter Chilean sovereignty at all” Piñera said that “we have a very good relationship with Argentina” and that the border incident “does not affect or alter Chilean sovereignty at all”
The Patagonian glaciers provide some of the area's most spectacular scenery. The Chilean-Argentine border stretches nearly 5,000 kilometers in total The Patagonian glaciers provide some of the area's most spectacular scenery. The Chilean-Argentine border stretches nearly 5,000 kilometers in total

Chilean President Sebastian Piñera insisted that he had no problem with Argentina despite a disputed claim over extensive Patagonian glaciers along the two countries' joint but unmarked border.

 The disputed glaciers lie in a mountainous area that has been waiting to be definitively marked since 1998. It is one of the last of many often-thorny border disputes between the two neighbors still awaiting final resolution.

When Argentine scientists included the glaciers in an inventory of Argentine-controlled ice, Chile's Foreign Ministry sent a note to its Argentine counterpart seeking clarification.

But Piñera, on a visit to the Patagonian city of Coyhaique, said the dispute stemmed from a difference in the measuring systems used by the two sides. “Argentina has one scale, and Chile has another,” he said.

Piñera denied that “Chile has ceded any glaciers whatsoever.” He added that “we have a very good relationship with Argentina” and that the border incident “does not affect or alter Chilean sovereignty at all.”

The Patagonian glaciers provide some of the area's most spectacular scenery. The Chilean-Argentine border stretches nearly 5,000 kilometers in total, roughly equal to the distance across the continental United States.

The armies of each country guard the border, but it is not uncommon for patrols to cross the frontier – which is allowed by “tacit agreement” between Santiago and Buenos Aires, Piñera said. Chile, though far smaller than Argentina, contains four-fifths of all South American glaciers.

Categories: Politics, Argentina, Chile.

Top Comments

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  • Brit Bob

    But if the children have been told that it belongs to Argentina?

    Territorial indoctrination by Argentina almost led to war with Chile in 1978, and led to the Falklands War in 1982.

    Falklands - Argentina's Imaginary Territory (1 pg):- https://www.academia.edu/35715281/Falklands_Argentinas_Imaginary_Territory

    Oct 23rd, 2018 - 08:44 am +1
  • nitrojuan

    Has Chilindian Patagonia land? I dont think so, the sea will eat the other side of the Andes soon.. :)

    Oct 24th, 2018 - 12:02 am 0
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