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Montevideo, December 23rd 2024 - 11:58 UTC

 

 

Her Majesty, Blair and Margaret Thatcher join Falklands service

Thursday, June 14th 2007 - 21:00 UTC
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The Queen Elizabeth II, Baroness Thatcher, Prime Minister Blair and his wife Cherie <i>(Photo Crown Copyright/MOD 2007) The Queen Elizabeth II, Baroness Thatcher, Prime Minister Blair and his wife Cherie <i>(Photo Crown Copyright/MOD 2007)

Commemorations to mark the 25th anniversary of the end of the Falkland Islands conflict between Britain and Argentina were held in Britain Thursday, attended by Queen Elizabeth II, Tony Blair and former Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher.

The Falkland Islands, in the South Atlantic, were 'liberated' by British forces on June 14, 1982, two-and-a-half months after they had been invaded by Argentina. A total of 255 British servicemen and more than 650 Argentines were killed in the conflict. Thursday's service at the Falklands Memorial Chapel in Pangbourne, outside London, was attended by veterans, military leaders and relatives of the British war victims. For many, the church service offered an opportunity to remember the 150 British war dead in Iraq, and those who have died in Afghanistan, commentators aid. Moments before the Service of Thanksgiving began, four Harrier jets performed a flypast above the chapel. Thatcher, 81, who dispatched a British task force to the Islands in 1982, said in a radio address Wednesday that the war had been justified and sacrifices were made for a 'noble cause.' There were no speeches Thursday, but Thatcher was prominent among the congregation, which included Prime Minister Tony Blair and his wife, Cherie. The Queen, also 81, later placed a commemorative stone from one of the battle sites on a memorial cairn near the Chapel. Defence Secretary Des Browne said before the service that the liberation of the Falkland Islands had been a 'huge achievement.' 'As we remember the service and sacrifice our armed forces gave 25 years ago, we remember too those who continue this proud tradition on operations around the world today,' he said. Events to mark the anniversary were taking place all over Britain Thursday, culminating in a veterans' parade and a ceremonial flypast in London Sunday. Commemorations on the Falkland Islands Thursday were to be joined by Prince Edward, the Queen's youngest son. His brother, Prince Andrew, who served as a navy pilot in the conflict 25 years ago, wrote in the Daily Telegraph newspaper that he conflict had been a 'life-changing experience.' Although war was 'not glamorous,' and indeed 'it was dirty,' he remained convinced until this day that 'it was our duty to recover those islands,' Andrew wrote.

Categories: Politics, Mercosur.

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