Twenty one countries from South America and Africa strongly supported their commitment to keep the South Atlantic free of arms of massive destruction and expressed concern over the British military presence in the Falklands/Malvinas, which are claimed by Argentina. Read full article
Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesWhat arms of mass destruction?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 03:44 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Its just the gravy train. Propagating another issue to keep them busy.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 03:54 pm - Link - Report abuse 0As you were the Falklands and the UK.
The declaration calls for “quick and unconditional end to colonialism in all its forms and manifestations” [1]
Jan 17th, 2013 - 03:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Well the UN says that 'free association' is a suitable end to colonialism, surely that's the matter closed. End of.
for the resumption of negotiations between Argentina and the UK in accordance with the UN resolution [2]
Well the UN resolution is closed because the falkland islands are self governing and chose to be a BOT through free-association with the UK. The resolution is resolved. End of.
The 21 countries also asked for an “urgent reform” of the UN Security Council so that it becomes “more representative of developing countries, efficient and transparent” [3]
So in [3] Argentina is so morally deviant that it thinks paying its bills is a crime against it, so they're expecting the security council to be more representative of morally deviant countries? uh, really?
“In this context we see with concern the development of illegitimate hydrocarbons exploration activities in the disputed zone as well as the strengthening of the UK military presence in the zone” [4]
In [4] they didn't see the sense in inviting the FIG, UK, Norway... any of the atlantic ridge countries in order to express their concerns? or just spout the usual copypasta Argentine monologue?
It's just moronia at its worst.
@2, agreed. Another load of old tosh, revamped and re-circulated.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 03:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0This is very disappointing to read. An end to colonialism, weapons of mass destruction, militarisation, UN resolutions
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:03 pm - Link - Report abuse 0We all know the true answers to these points (although SA and Argentina will profess something different with no proof). Argentina wants to colonise the Falklands, the UKs military presence is in direct response to the Argentine threat, brazil is militarising the Atlantic through their arms process, there are no weapons of mass destruction down there that we can officially know of and the UN resolutions call for and do not require talks.
I know the UK has more pressing and important matters to deal with but the longer this goes on the more we simply look stupid and, dare I say it, weak. I don’t want us to go to war but I do want us to protect the places we have a responsibility to protect… Namely the Falklands, Gibraltar etc. Our government need to show our calm strength and clear resolve a directly as possible to these countries by actively working with and bring on side the other SA and African countries. I am confident given the choice these countries would rather work with and have a relationship with the UK than Argentina.
'' underlined its “commitment with the consolidation of the South Atlantic as a zone of peace and cooperation.''
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:09 pm - Link - Report abuse 0So intimidating passengers of cruise liners and the companies that run them is peaceful and cooperative?
''The declaration calls for “quick and unconditional end to colonialism in all its forms and manifestations”
Are the african states up in arms over Ascension or St Helena? No, didn't think so as they acknowledge them for what they ACTUALLY are.
French Guiana however IS a colony but I've yet to hear any word about that from the Malvinistas on Mercopress when they rattle on about colonies.
@1 Elaine
The arms of mass destruction are attached the bodies of the rioters in Bs As.
Blah, blah, blah. Love the reference to the make up of the Security Counicl, jesus christ, you imagine what it would look like made up of five of these nations. If they do not like the rules and format of the UN the answers simple. Ferkin leave, nobody forced them to join, most of them won't be missed anyway, that is until the next time they get in the shit and want bailing out again!
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:09 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Well I hope they all had a LOVELY time inMontevideo and spent lots of U$D
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:10 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@5 'A moment's calm at a time of anger is worth 100 days of sorrow' - don't let some pitiful person wind you up so much that you lash out. Strength is through control, not through continuously showing your capabilities.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:10 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Sun Zi, a chinese strategist, suggested that when you are in a strong position, you should actually appear weak. So don't fear looking weak, because it ultimately helps you in a war; the opposition will underestimate you completely.
Finally the japanese samurai would shout in order to intimidate the opposition, but it only relied on one defining stroke to the kote (hands) or men (head) that allowed the intimidated to become the winner.
You don't look weak by having someone intimidate you, you only look weak if you are intimidated. However, the winner is the one who cleaves the other person's head in two or cuts their hands off.
Dealing with the argentines is no different.
The UK will not make the same mistake twice, 'fool me once, more fool you etc...'
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:12 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Interesting to read on sites like 'La Nacion/tn.com.ar/Clarin' there is no support for attacking the Falklands, either economically or militarily and is clearly seen as a distraction from the economic meltdown. The people of Argentina will not be fooled again either...
Don't you love it, all those black African faces at a South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation meeting, when was the last time you saw a South American on their African brothers side of the Ocean, helping them with their problems? never, thats when, never. Truly pathetic!
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:23 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@9 Shed-time
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:24 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Very interesting reading. Thanks for that.
I know it shouldnt bother me but these bullying tatics by CFK and her team are infuriating and seeing other countires stand by them, agree with them or turn a blind eye to them is very disapointing.
They try to make a full of us as a country... Being patriotic that really infuriates me!
@ZOPACAS Mind your own business! There is one, just one, aggressive, belligerent country in the South Atlantic area. The gangsters of arsieland. If you want to have a go at colonialism, concentrate on two. France and arsieland. In history, the Falkland Islands were first occupied, by the British, in 1690. 54 years later, the French turned up. 23 years later, the Spanish BOUGHT the French settlement. Arsieland didn't even EXIST until 49 years later. Then it trespassed on British sovereign territory a few times. Now, in the 21st century, the Falkland Islands are a free, democratic country. Had Britain not intervened 31 years ago, the Falkland Islands would not be a free, democratic country. They would be industrial and war bases controlled by a despotic, dictatorial regime. Britain is the UN-authorised Administration Authority. Charged with ensuring good governance. The Falkland Islanders are content with this arrangement. Britain also takes responsibility, in consultation with the Islanders, for foreign relations and defence. Britain will not permit the Islanders to be ethnically cleansed, enslaved or dominated. Unlike arsieland, Britain has taken NO aggressive or belligerent actions. If necessary, Britain will stand between the Falkland Islands and the rest of the world. We've done something like it before. Remember 1939 to 1945? Who stood alone? Who fought through that whole period and won? Not the Americans. They did nothing until 1942. Not the Russians. They didn't do anything until 1941. Just one reason why Britain is a member of the UN Security Council. Because Britain did more than ANYONE ELSE to defend democracy and freedom. As it continues to do to this day!
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:26 pm - Link - Report abuse 0UK unconcerned ; talks with Argentina a matter for the Falkland Islands.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:32 pm - Link - Report abuse 0In other news, foreign ministers of Atlantic countries enjoy holiday in Montivideo at taxpayers expense, productive talks impossible due to Argentina
So concerned they waited all this time to express them. LMFAO!
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@1 ElaineB
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:37 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Apparently there is some gym bunny down in the Falklands with massive guns ...
Well she did offer a shag to all these tinpot leaders if they stood on argentinas side... she is going to have one sore fanny lol
Jan 17th, 2013 - 04:43 pm - Link - Report abuse 0LOL, oh the irony.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:03 pm - Link - Report abuse 0we see with concern...the strengthening of the UK military presence in the zone
In the next breath,
there is the need to establish...combined military exercises
Do these people actually listen to the shite they spew out?
Personally I'd like to see the UK resume negotiations with Argentina. Go in and tell Argentina they are scamming, debt defaulting, greedy thieves and F**K YOU!---There , negotiations done.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:05 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@12 They want it to infuriate you, me, and everyone in the UK. That's their plan and as a patriot, you understand that following the plan of a belligerent foreign nation is effectively the same as committing treason. You're basically just acting out the desires of a foreign power.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:09 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Better to just appear weak, and then when they act, and they will... simply chop their hands off with one stroke.
TWIMC
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:11 pm - Link - Report abuse 0And yet another nail in the British imperial dreams coffin in the South-Atlantic……
Eventually; the flag-lowering orders will be issued and the Union flag will be, with full honours, shiped back home to England……
As they did in Hong Kong some few years ago….
As they are doing in Norlin Airlann, as we speak…..
“urgent reform” of the UN Security Council so that it becomes “more representative of developing countries, efficient and transparent”
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:13 pm - Link - Report abuse 0No problem as long as they all get their checkbooks out & start paying the Billions each year it costs to support the actions of the security council, Lets see first they are going need to spend Billions on ships, Army's & Planes & then they can start helping in sending their own troops into war zones & watch them come back in boxes by the thousands while preparing their people for the eventual reprisals against their countries that are sure to follow.
@21 The falkland islanders, like the canadians and the australians have their own national and territorial flags.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:15 pm - Link - Report abuse 0The union flag is mainly there because it looks nice, and we left lots of them after the 1982 War of Aggression that you lost.
FYI. HK also had it's own flag back then. The new one looks pretty terrible.
13@-1690 and you were there! right?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:17 pm - Link - Report abuse 0fight for democracy!? hahaha tell that to the Chagossians!!Brits tell their version of history that is usually distorted in their favor.
To the Turnip at (23)
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:25 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Looks pretty much like the Union Flag to me......
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T2Rvdktho_g
Come on Think, give us a date. Let us feel the fibre of your fabric :)
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:30 pm - Link - Report abuse 0My money is on the FI remaining British until the Islanders want a change.
(26) Beef
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:38 pm - Link - Report abuse 0You say...:
”Come on Think, give us a date. Let us feel the fibre of your fabric :)”
I say...:
Difficult to give you a precise date....
You never know with those Norlin Airlanners.....;-)
@21
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:39 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Oh I have missed the nail & coffin analogy. How many nails is that so far Think? How many do you need to finally bury (to continue the theme of the analogy) the rights of the Islands? How many nails do you need to kill the Islanders wishes? If you are so wonderfully insightful (as you love to portray) give us a little more detail to your prophecies. Or is it all bullshit Think? I vote bullshit, but what does an Islanders vote means to an Argentine? Apparently, very little, unless you side with Argentina – funny that…
HAHAHA, I've just seen the release in full.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:43 pm - Link - Report abuse 058. Reaffirm GA resolution 31/49 which requires both parties in the sovereignty dispute over the Malvinas Islands, South Georgias Islands and South Sandwich Islands and the maritime surrounding areas, to refrain from taking decisions that would imply introducing unilateral modifications in the situation while the islands are going through the process recommended by the General Assembly resolutions. In this context, view with concern the development of illegitimate hydrocarbon exploration activities in the area under dispute, as well as the reinforcement of the military presence by the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in the area, in violation of UNGA Resolution 31/49
I see a few issues here.
1. Ban Ki-Moon stated in November 2012 that the UK is not violating UN resolutions over the Falklands.
2. 31/49 makes no mention of South Georgia, the South Sandwich Islands or the surrounding maritime areas, only the Falklands.
3. 31/49 makes no mention of reinforcing the military as being forbidden.
4. 31/49 does state to refrain from taking decisions that would imply introducing unilateral modifications in the situation while the islands are going through the process recommended by the General Assembly resolutions - That would include Argentina invading the islands in 1982 then.
5. 31/49 dates from 1976 and due to the illegal actions of Argentina in 1982 is now meaningless.
6. 31/49 is a non binding GA resolution and as such cannot be violated which in any case takes us neatly back to point 1.
http://www.defesanet.com.br/geopolitica/noticia/9324/ZOPACAS----Declaracao-de-Montevideu-
http://www.defesanet.com.br/geopolitica/noticia/9324/ZOPACAS----Declaracao-de-Montevideu-
http://www.defesanet.com.br/geopolitica/noticia/9324/ZOPACAS----Declaracao-de-Montevideu-
@25 Thunk
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:44 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I prefer this one:
http://reaganiterepublicanresistance.blogspot.com/2013/01/po...
Catchy little headline too,
Touche Think. Come on me old mukker take a punt on when the Falklands will come under the Argentine banner. Take a chance, you know you want to.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:48 pm - Link - Report abuse 0SELF-DETERMINATION well that puts an end to argentinas archaic colonial ambitions, maybe that was the message the south atlantic developing nations are trying to tell argentina..............STATUS:.....Quo!!!
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:52 pm - Link - Report abuse 0SELF-DETERMINATION....The real message!
Trouble with link think, let's try this one:
Jan 17th, 2013 - 05:56 pm - Link - Report abuse 0http://www.flickr.com/photos/stevebranley/4355216293/
Gustbury - have you ever met a Chagossian? Have you ever discussed with them about their problems?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:01 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I ask because you seem to rely on them a lot for information yet your comments are lacking in any form of intelligence.
@33 Nice! SLR great piece of weaponry, kicks like a mule!!
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:03 pm - Link - Report abuse 0bring them out of retirement we may need them once more?
Buenos Aires Herald 17/01/2013
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:06 pm - Link - Report abuse 0More Rubbish from la Kretina:-
http://www.buenosairesherald.com/article/121974/cfk-malvinas-the-perfect-example-of-uns-double-standards
@6 Raven
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:09 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Angola maybe does have colonial ambitions on St. Helena, when CFK was in Angola last year St. Helena was a topic of conversation, as I pointed out then.
Someone ought to take the silly moo to one side and explain the difference between binding and non binding resolutions, while they are at it, they can try it with this lot on here. Mind you, neither will listen, never do, not unless it is something they want to hear.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:15 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@36 Crustina on tour...next stop North korea, Iran, Syria, uganga, venezuela (again), basically any dictatorship with little or no human rights and wish to be entertained by an old ugly widow! Crack on......
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:16 pm - Link - Report abuse 0SELF-DETERMINATION!
@38 reality check
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:24 pm - Link - Report abuse 0She is desperate for any movement on her Falkland obsession. If you get chance to have a read of the comments of an FI story in Clarin have a look. The average Argentine is sick of hearing about it and it seems, sick of her...
Just had a thought how about if we agreed to talk about sovereignty but sent a member of the FIG to do it?
They are British citizens after all.
@36 Gordo1
Nice link thanks, it just shows how out of touch she is with reality.
Just filling in for the trolls...
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:32 pm - Link - Report abuse 0THE ISLANDS BELONG TO ARGENTINA FOREVER! We will get nukes and stuff 100% Argentinian! And we agree with Cristina 100% about everything forever! MALVINAS! I'm safely in Canada! [insert off topic drivel with a bunch of complex sounding words from a Thesaurus here] Cristina's botox face is beautiful and stuff!
I think that just about covers it.
@41
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0You forgot to mention the pirates!
@40, CFK has refused to directly acknowledge them when in the room with them before -- making it very clear that she sees Argentina as a colonial overlord and no different from the Junta that her government pretends to condemn. I agree however that it would make an indelible statement on Argentine and C24 hypocrisy lies w.r.t. the Falklands for Cameron to arrive to such talks, introduce the FIG and other delegates of the islands who experienced the true face of Argentine fascism firsthand in 1982, introduce them and then go to the back of the room and sit quietly while the world sees her as the spoiled little brat that she is.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:44 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Steve,
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:46 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Think the Islanders have offered to sit down and talk? she of course contemptuously ignored them, did not even acknowledge their letter. After all they are untermensch! they are irrelevent, they are not people, they do not exist. Which of course is exactly how we want her to treat the Islanders, makes it far easier to tell her to push off.
LOL loving the humour.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 06:49 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Nothing has changed and nothing will change; unless the Falkland Islanders want it to.
EB
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:03 pm - Link - Report abuse 0To quote some famous American thingy person.
Amen to that Pilgrim!
@45 Well, the issue of change is an interesting one. The UN was created in order to prevent the world constantly revisiting its history of unilateralism, through multi-lateralism. The current system of having a security council of influential states has actually delivered something that the world hasn't seen for a while, which is 50+ years of relative peace.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:08 pm - Link - Report abuse 0This 50 years has also importantly delivered relatively static national boundaries. However, KFC now wants to create a UN that will fit in with her own desires and allow economically small states, and the many despotic ones at that to have some control over the actions of those higher up the food chain. As all the major countries leave en masse, this will lead us back into unilateralism and away from peace. She's just full of lies.
My main question is, if the UN is so terrible in her eyes, why doesn't she leave and create some other body that fits with her need for expansionism?
@43 @44 @40
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:10 pm - Link - Report abuse 0The more I think about this the more I like it.
CFK's main ammunition is the UN resolutions.
Britain says it wont talk unless the islanders agree.
Send the FIG to do the negotiating = End of problem.
It's interesting, but the non-binding UN resolution suggests Britain and Argentina should talk.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:14 pm - Link - Report abuse 0And talk we did...and Argentina invaded.
Then, we talked again..and Argentina stormed out
So, this time we are prepared to talk again, here are my terms:
1) Argentina must completely remove any claim to the Falkland Islands from their constitution
2) Argenina must immediately add to its school curriculum the true history of the islands, and teach their children how successive governments have used propoganda to lie to them
3) Argentina must immediately withdraw from Patagonia, returning the land they usurped in a clear act of brutal 19th century colonialism to the indigenous population. The new state set-up should be fully funded by Argentina. All oil in the Malvinas Basin should belong to the new state.
4) Argentina must settle all overdue international debts including hedge-funds
5) Argentina must compensate the Falkland Islanders $1m per head for all losses incurred due to their bullying.
6) Argentina must immediately hold a general election, where the UN can ensure freedom of the press to accurately portray the options. CFK should not be allowed to stand.
7) CFK should return all monies embezzled from the state and spend the remainder of her days as a $1 a go hooker on the streets of Buenos Aires.
That'll do for now....
45 ElaineB
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:18 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Let me think about that one for a moment.
Um.
Um.
Er.
Nah. I don't want it to change. I vote Yes in March.
That's if that embarrassing bloody question doesn't get changed!
Chuckle chuckle.
Nah, no way this woman is ever going to leave the UN, sadly. She reminds me of that annoying child you always find in schools, running off to tell tales to teacher. Come to think of it, that's probably where she picked up her impressive political skills and world reknown vindictiveness, when she does not get her way!
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:30 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Does any islander have an idea of the volume of people voting no in the referendum?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:40 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Ladbrokes has ...
Over (20.5) @ evens
Under (20.5) @ 8/11
I have had a few quid on over ;)
http://www.oddschecker.com/politics-and-election/falklands-referendum/voters-against-british-sovereignty
I would put a few quid, for what it would be worth, on under but I definitely think it will be something between 10 and 20. I don't recall how many can actually vote but I would think the result will be about 99% yes. I would also bet turn-out will be around 90%. There will always be a few disgruntled individuals who will vote no.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:52 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I suppose if the result is 99% yes the deadbeats on here- some of whom will have most likely voted- will say that clearly not EVERYBODY wants to remain British.
Chuckle chuckle.
The 21 countries also asked for an “urgent reform” of the UN Security Council so that it becomes “more representative of developing countries, efficient and transparent” and for “an international financial architecture more representative in which the developing countries have a greater representation and voice”.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 07:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0that sums it all up nicley, zopacas its really just a joke!!!
Fine, let it become more representative, when they start forking up the represenative share of the running costs! or is that too much to expect?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:02 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@54 scarfo
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:08 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I doubt the African countries added anything at all, the final statement was probably pre-written weeks ago by Brazil with their security council ambitions and Argentina with their colonial ambitions.
I'm pretty sure that the Argies do not want to spend the same amount of money on the UN as the USA does.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:19 pm - Link - Report abuse 0to many words
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:21 pm - Link - Report abuse 0allow me.
[ Atlantic countries concerned with UK presence ]
Reply
get lost.
@52 What odds are they offering on over 95%?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:22 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Time to bet the family jewels I think!
I am not so sure, they would probably negotiate 20C on the dollar and then wind up not paying it anyway.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:24 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@59 Steveu
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:30 pm - Link - Report abuse 0They don't that betting option but do have along with the one I posted earlier...
Referendum Outcome Yes = 1/500
Cameron to visit Falklands in 2013 = 6/1
Cameron/Kirchner to have official bilateral meeting in 2013 = 25/1
http://www.argentinaindependent.com/currentaffairs/anonymous-hacks-indec-website-for-lying-to-the-people/
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:31 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Only 3 from south america , 24 from africa,
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0what a load of crap,
why no middle atlantic nations,,
why no north atlantic nations,
after all , water moves does it not,
why are they bovering,
CFK will not listen ,
she will stop at nothing untill she gets it all,
and the beginings of an Argentine empire .
@27 Think
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:42 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Regarding N.Ireland and the prospect of a United Ireland - the most recent opinion poll put those in favour of a UI at only 7%. When the question was asked would you support a UI in 20 years? that still only rose to 30%. Given that the proportion of Catholics and Protestants in NI is already roughly equivalent, that means that the new status quo has broad acceptance in both communities. The Irish Republic which previously claimed sovereignty and jurisdiction in NI dropped that claim and accepts the principle of consent. As a result, relations between the UK & Ireland have never been better.
@62 Lulz
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:45 pm - Link - Report abuse 0The M24 website didn't want to say that INDEC were called liars, so it said they said 'silly things'. i guess they're pro front for fail then.
@63 briton
Jan 17th, 2013 - 08:50 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Interesting point as African countries Guinea, Equatorial Guinea, Liberia and Senegal are further north than South American countries Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana.
Think, Beef is still wainting for your estimate of when Islanders will hand over control to Argentina?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:16 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I love the bit about ending all forms of colonialism in the region - this statement sort of stuffs Buenos Aires,s case!
What more clearer example of good old fashioned imperialistic colonialism can there be of a government- Argentina,s - wanting to impose its sovereign control over a land (the Islands) whose population who live there and have built the Islands up from an unihabited state over 180 odd years - clearly do not want them to do so?
Please dont start the lying CFK crap about population being booted out in 1833 - we all know it did not happen! We also all know that the blood of some of those here in early 1833, still flows in the Islands today - and does not want Argentina here.
Militarization - can you give me any clue as to why Brazil was not mentiuoned? - Nuclear submarines to be built - hitec new warhsips to be built - hitec new aircraft to be bought.
Compare that with the numbers of ships, planes and infantry that UK has in the islands - which has DECREASED considerably in the last 20-25 years!
Peaceful? - so now on there will be no harrassment of cruise liners nor fishing vessesl innocently exercising International right of free passage through an EEZ outside territorial waters?
No more refusals to civil airlines wanting to overfly?
Gads Argentina needs a smack in the mouth. I think that is the only thing that will shut this harpy up.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:17 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Its all very exciting.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:17 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Where's she off next? Vietnam isn't it. Another football shirt and another speech of thanks for their support on the Malvinas. I would guess with Vietnams colonial past, she is really, really going to rub it in.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:23 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@70 What with Vietnam's current naval issues with their fellow communists about China claiming all the islands and water in the south china sea up to the beaches of the phils, viet, indo, etc, I'd say they'd both have some common ground to discuss island nonsense.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:40 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@64 Redrow Think is just an idle Patagonian whorsewhisperer from Chubut who is paid to post and who knows bugger all about what is happening in Belfast or NI other than the newsfeeds his masters give him. Think? He is just a mercenary first generation Scandinavian warty manglewurzelwhich crawls out of its damp clamp to infest these threads
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:46 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I'm pretty sure Vietnam have already supported Argentina's colonial cause. That's why CFK picked these particular countries to visit. They have all previously supported Argentina, for political reasons.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:50 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@61 Steve
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:50 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I think the 25/1 odds for a Bilateral UK/Arg meeting are very short - especially as FIG are, by definition, not included. No way will the UK participate without the islanders being a full member of any negotiations.
Vietnam
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:53 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Designated one of UKTI’s High Growth Markets, Vietnam has many opportunities for UK businesses. With a population of almost 90m, it is the 13th most populous country in the world and an exciting market of increasing affluence. Vietnam joined the WTO in 2007. GDP growth in the 4-year period after accession averaged 6.5%. The UK/Vietnam relationship is strong: trade and investment ties are an important element of the Strategic Partnership Agreement signed in 2010. Bilateral trade increased by over 26% in 2011, with UK exports of goods and services to Vietnam reaching £520m. Registered UK investments exceeded £1.6bn in 2011
75 reality check
Jan 17th, 2013 - 09:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0There are ( as any American vet will tell you ) 135 species of snake in Vietnam.
131 of them are vemonous......................
Yeah! and I would have a tenner on the four that bite her won't be!!!!!
Jan 17th, 2013 - 10:06 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Headline.
SNAKE BITES KFC, SNAKE DIES!
A statement of 21 countries, umpteen are colonies of spain and portugal .. colonies in forms and manifestations.. honestly it's one rule for some and another rule for others.. self serving pontificators the lot.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 10:12 pm - Link - Report abuse 0(67) Islander1
Jan 17th, 2013 - 10:21 pm - Link - Report abuse 0My estimate is that some pretty radical political developments, in favor of the Argentinean position on the Malvinas issue, will happen during my lifespan......
And please..... dont start the lying FIG(leaf) crap about the Argentinean population not being booted out in 1833 - we all know it did happen!
(64) Redrow
I'm not an expert on Irish affairs nor do I pretend to be one.......
But, going by what one reads in the press lately, your comment seems a bit on the Rosy side....
(72) redpoll
You say...:
Think is just an idle Patagonian whorsewhisperer from Chubut....
I say...:
A Patagonian whorsewhisperer ???
50% whorewhisperer
&
50% horsewhisperer
Jupppp...... That's sounds just like me ;-)))
@79 You still don't seem to understand that you turned peaceful negotiations into the War of Aggression in 1982 and lost. Under law the winner keeps all, just like when you took large parts of Paraguay.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 10:39 pm - Link - Report abuse 0The only way Argentinians will get their hands on 'Malvinas Argentina' in your lifetime is if they build it out of papier-mâché.
Get building.
@79
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:00 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Thank goodness for Think. Surely now, at last, somebody is going to come up with the missing evidence that the Argentinian population was booted out in 1833. I'm particularly interested in understanding why Vernet never mentioned it, despite having launched legal proceedings in both the UK and the US. Tell us do, Think.
@81 maybe Vernet forgot to mention it, but Peron saw it all happen in a vision, and to Argies that's as good as the truth.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:05 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@82
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:11 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Of course, Vernet just forgot. It can easily happen, General Rosas must have forgotten it too when he signed a Treaty of Perfect Friendship a mere 17 years after this monstrous outrage.
@79 Glad to hear your confirmation of your own character Wurzel
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:12 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@83 did he sign it with invisible ink?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:13 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@85
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:17 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Let's ask Think. He knows everything.
(84) redpoll
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:20 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Uhhhhhhh........
An Apologist of War and a Guardian of the Moral Values.....
An Anglo member of Tradición, Familia y Propiedad, I presume.....?
http://falklandsnews.wordpress.com/2013/01/17/fernandez-accuses-the-uk-of-disobeying-un-orders/
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:24 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Never ending crap - has she forgotten Ban ki-moon's comments so quickly ??
I'm particularly interested in understanding why Vernet never mentioned it, despite having launched legal proceedings in both the UK and the US. Tell us do, Think.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:25 pm - Link - Report abuse 0AHAHHAHAHAHAHA Ignorant.Vernet was very adamant to use MIlitary force to kick the brits pirates out!.....Ahahah poor deluded ex empire..So stupid..They wanted to hand back MAlvinas, since 1947.....Why all the fuss? The nautral is MALVINAS ARGENTINAS.... poor hopeless Malvinenses..
Think - care to name the civilian settlers who were forced to leave then - they are all in the Argentine National Archives in - i think - Mar del plata - it lists the 4 who volunteeered to leave of their own free will . Nobody else did - they all stayed - I fyou like I can list the names of those who stayed, the name of the girl who married an early English settler (their descendents still live here) - and I can give you the name of the oldest lady who died here in 1865 - her grave is in Stanley cemetery.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:27 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Oh no - I forget - the one thing Argentines hate on here is Reality?
Ok your life time the flag of ownership will change? - Really - I figured you were around middle age and a bit similar to me!
Vernet worked for us Marv .... well known fact :-)
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:30 pm - Link - Report abuse 01856 – May 5th, Luis Vernet writes to Lord Harrowby; “… the wish, to get my Colony under the British Flag, was in accordance with my own interests and those of my colonists, which required such change of flag; because situated as we were on the Highway of Nations, we could not expect permanent prosperity, unless placed under the sovereignty of a Government capable of protecting us against filibustering or other aggressions. As to the grants of Land, wild cattle, and privileges, these were originally obtained not with the view to establish any claim to the Islands on the part of Buenos Ayres, but merely to secure the best protection I could for my new colony, from the Authorities for the time being, regardless who they might be.”
http://falklandstimeline.wordpress.com/
@79think
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:33 pm - Link - Report abuse 0”I say...:
A Patagonian whorsewhisperer ???
50% whorewhisperer
&
50% horsewhisperer
Jupppp...... That's sounds just like me ;-)))
Think, I'm sure he meant whore- worshipper”
Jupppp..... That's sounds just like you :-)))))
@89
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0The thing is, it were me, and I were in court trying to get recompense for such outrageous treatment, I'd have been screaming it from the rooftops. But maybe that's just me.
And isn't it funny that some months after the expulsion National Hero The Murderer Rivero was still around to set off on a murder spree? How come murderers and murder victims were allowed to stay? And how come there is no contemporaneous account on the expulsion anywhere? No list of names?
But it's a good point that the UK once wanted to give up the islands. But Poor Argentina boasts a political class os such staggering ineptitude that they've made it forever impossible for anybody eve to give you want most.
AHAHAHAHA etc etc etc
@91 So why do they have vernet all over their propaganda if he worked for the british? are they imbeciles?
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:35 pm - Link - Report abuse 0With regards to your other comment, she's basically calling Banksy Moon a liar. Which surely is contemptible in some way, having a wayward member of the UN call the head of the UN a liar. Wonder what Banksy Moon has to say about this?
(90) Islander1
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:42 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Thirty-eight (38) men......, thirteen (13) women and eight (8) children were forced by the British to leave......
Those 57 souls represented the 75% of the Argentinean population on them Islands in 1833.
As you say......., all well documented in our National Archives.....
@95
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:47 pm - Link - Report abuse 0What an amazing discovery. Have you a link for us?
Pure rubbish Think - you should be ashamed of yourself. An illegal garrison, the wives and children left. The Settlement stayed with the exception of 2 men and their wives who couldn't earn a living there. All recorded.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:50 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Of course, if BA had listened to the warning in 1829, the trespassing garrison wouldn't have been there.
Middle aged ??
@95 so in the minds of the argentines 25% (presumably mainly soldiers) were told to leave, and 75% remained.
Jan 17th, 2013 - 11:51 pm - Link - Report abuse 0How does this 75% explain your country's propaganda about 'everyone' being told to leave and an implanted population being brought from the UK to replace them?
Even your own crafted nonsense is nonsense.
(97) Mr. Lorton
Jan 18th, 2013 - 12:11 am - Link - Report abuse 0You know perfectly that my numbers are correct.....
Of those 25% kept in them Islands by British false promises or sheer force I could mention El Gaucho Rivero and his comrades......that soon realized what big liars those Englishmen where and took decisive action against them.....................
Or Vernet's couple of Slave Negresses forced to stay and serve their new masters.....
Their DNA surely runs on the couple of half-blood Kelper families that still squatter on them Islands.....
PS:
Jupppppp.... Very kind indeed of Islander1 to call me Middle-Aged :-)))
@99 Wait a minute, you just said that 171 people (75%) remained on the islands in 1833
Jan 18th, 2013 - 12:17 am - Link - Report abuse 0... so after 180 years (2013-1833 = 180) with a fairly typical population growth rate of 1.6% (0.016) where the world growth rate has currently dropped to 1.2%, we end up with a figure of ..... 2977 people. That's pretty much the current population of the islands, as it stands today.
So where are these supposedly 'implanted people' that you argentines put so much emphasis on, and why didn't they breed?
You Argies are crap at basic maths, and even your nonsense makes no sense.
Think- Glad we agree that the River Plate militia and their families were indeed ordered to leave.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 12:27 am - Link - Report abuse 0Yoo seem a bit vague about all the settlers though? Shall I list them for you?
Age well I hover around the 3 score bit - I figured you might be 10 yrs approx below.
The only possible change in flag and ownership likley to happen here in say the next half century would be that the Falklands Flag at Govt house is replaced by a Union Jack when it becomes the residence of the Governor General - in the Independent British Commonwealth Nation of the Falkland Islands. A pipe dream at the moment I agree - but it will happen one day for sure- but probably not in my lifetime perhaps- we need an extra 0 on the end of the population total at least!
Now squatters - really - how can the descendents of people who prior to Jan 1833 were here under the River Plate authority (or whatever Arg was then) be squatters?
Do please explain the difference between them - and say anyone of European descent who lived in what is now Arg - prior to 1810?
@99
Jan 18th, 2013 - 12:34 am - Link - Report abuse 0Oh goodness, another mystery - why didn't Vernet claim compensation for his scadalously usurped slave negresses in any of his court actions in the UK and the US? He claimed for horses and outbuildings and all kinds of other property.
Think - if you believe that rubbish about Rivero then you are far more brainwashed than I thought.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 12:50 am - Link - Report abuse 0Your numbers are only those of the illegal garrison - and indeed include the prisoners who were subsequently executed. Brave Argentinians all - I'm sure :-)
Interestingly Onslow - male chauvanist that he was, didn't include the ladies in his count. But then, you were never very good with history were you old 'un :-)
http://www.scribd.com/doc/106213592/Falklands-Wars-The-Expulsion-Myth
http://www.scribd.com/doc/106213592/Falklands-Wars-The-Expulsion-Myth
Big update in a few days - I've been working my way through those files released last month. All interest (yes - I must get a life :-)
@redrow.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 02:43 am - Link - Report abuse 0Regarding N.Ireland and the prospect of a United Ireland, there is no longer a divided Ireland. :)
4 of the 6 counties are strongly consistently voting in Pro-U.I / Pro-Irish parties.
The mayor of the capital is from the U.I party (Sinn Fein).
The second minister as above.
Christmas season - lights in the Irish language on the city hall.
Christmas season - Absence of the Union flag on the city hall.
Before - nationalists rioting and getting water-cannoned.
Now - unionists rioting and getting water-cannoned.
Euro broadly accepted as currency, no discernible border, no border checks. So walk on in when you like and spend some euro, just like the rest of the island.
'British only' as personal identity - 40%.
Second city 'Derry' - 52% identifying as 'Irish only'.
25% now availing of introduced right to Irish passport.
Catholicism approaching parity with Protestantism (Original Protestant state concept = now dead)
A re-named police service (dropped the word 'royal').
Heck of a change from the 80's ...or even the 90's for that matter.
I foresee a Scottish independence style devolution-max being put in place soon, preceded by a cross-community agreed national flag (less than 3 years for flag).
At which time all thats left is some kind of semi-statelet jurisdiction entity thing being financed from London.
Which will be contentious given that consistent G.B polls over decades show that G.B wants rid of N.I. and sees it as a burden.
But Ireland will let G.B pay for it for a while (given it takes more from London than it pays in) , build it up nicely, get it ready for hand-over.
Seen everything now, an Argentinian sorting out the the Northern Ireland situation? Why am I so suprised, after all, they know everything else. Well at least they think they do.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 02:50 am - Link - Report abuse 0The declaration calls for “quick and unconditional end to colonialism in all its forms and manifestations” and for the resumption of negotiations between Argentina and the UK in accordance with the UN resolution
Jan 18th, 2013 - 05:06 am - Link - Report abuse 0Another victory for Argentina.
@106 Mark
Jan 18th, 2013 - 05:45 am - Link - Report abuse 0Another victory for Argentina.
Huh? What ? Explain, please.
Strange that there isnt a squeak in the african press about any of this.... sounds like the usual RG beat up .. 'just before you go could you sign this'... 'oh...did I win the lucky door prize??'
Jan 18th, 2013 - 05:54 am - Link - Report abuse 0Mark
Jan 18th, 2013 - 07:02 am - Link - Report abuse 0Hows the snow in your part of the UK.
Argentina and Victory in the same sentence. Wow, now that's what I call an Oxymoron.
You do know, your supposed lull your opponents and not yourselfs into a sense of false confidence, don't you?
Roll on referendum.
@106: Oh good, so the long established colonies of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay et al will now pack up and go home? At last, the news the natives have been waiting for :D
Jan 18th, 2013 - 07:09 am - Link - Report abuse 0Another victory Morecrap - pray tell, when was the first one ???
Jan 18th, 2013 - 07:34 am - Link - Report abuse 0Marcos claims everything is a victory and yet for all of his victories the Falkland Islands are stronger than ever!
Jan 18th, 2013 - 07:52 am - Link - Report abuse 0Maybe the British are just too strong for these southern softies?
What a load of waffle..
Jan 18th, 2013 - 08:10 am - Link - Report abuse 0http://www.defesanet.com.br/geopolitica/noticia/9324/ZOPACAS----Declaracao-de-Montevideu-
Interesting that Argentina has taken over Uruguay..
119. Express gratitude and appreciation to the Government and the People of Express gratitude to Brazil, Nigeria, South Africa and the Argentine Uruguay for their warm hospitality....
Racism in Argentina goes on today - La Nación 18.01.2013
Jan 18th, 2013 - 08:29 am - Link - Report abuse 0http://www.lanacion.com.ar/1546554-el-drama-de-los-qom-morir-por-el-odio-y-la-discriminacion
@104 Vestige
Jan 18th, 2013 - 08:35 am - Link - Report abuse 0A rather partisan analysis there to put it mildly. Only 10 years ago Gerry Adams predicted a UI by 2016. How's that looking? While dissident Loyalist and Republican bullies can still make headlines, the people have moved on. Euros are commonly accepted at ports and airports in the UK, N.Ireland with the only land border in the UK accepts them more. Most mayoral positions now rotate in NI so yes there can be Nationalist mayors in Unionist-majority towns and vice versa. That NI looks and feels more neutral is a good thing. Bowler hats and painted kerbstones never made NI look British - their demise is good for both sides. Despite Catholics nearly equalling Protestants, only 7% of the population want a UI now (30% if in 20 years). But then that's self-determination for you.
@95 Think
Jan 18th, 2013 - 09:20 am - Link - Report abuse 0your maths is as bad as your misrepresentation of so called facts
38 + 13 + 8 = 59 not 57
@99
(97) Mr. Lorton - You know perfectly that my numbers are correct.....
The 21 countries also asked for an “urgent reform” of the UN Security Council so that it becomes “more representative of developing countries, efficient and transparent” and for “an international financial architecture more representative in which the developing countries have a greater representation and voice”.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 10:22 am - Link - Report abuse 0There have been calls to expand the permanent seats on the Security Council to better reflect the power dynamic of the modern world. This would likely involve the addition of a country like India or maybe Germany to the list (how the world has moved on since 1945 eh?).
These are still countries with the resources and influence to contribute extensively to UN deployments around the world.
The idea that backwards 3rd world banana republics like Argentina and Angola should be given permanent seats is pretty laughable, however.
And when this report talks about reforming global financial institutions it's pretty transparent that what they want is to make it easier for thieves and derelicts like Argentina to borrow money from everyone else under false pretenses with the intention of never giving it back. Sorry but the answer is no.
Next
@ Redrow. 115.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 10:30 am - Link - Report abuse 0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Northern_Ireland_election_seats_1997-2005-by.svg
See them there green bits, thats where people won't stand for god save the queen. Where a united Ireland prevails in culture and politics.
Them there places tend to get their postboxes painted green overnight.
GB pays for the upkeep, development and social welfare of these places.
Awfully nice of the English tax-payer.
@118 'English tax-payer' ? urm? Because of a complete absence of jobs in RoI (other than those associated with building much needed empty houses or the usual american companies avoiding taxes) pretty much every Irish person with above a half-decent education works in the UK.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 10:50 am - Link - Report abuse 0So, lets just say UK gov are using their taxes to pay for it and call it quits.
End of.
@99 Think,
Jan 18th, 2013 - 10:54 am - Link - Report abuse 0Even your (it wasn't us-it was the)junta realised that Rivero was a common murderer yet you laud him as a hero?????
Think, you are even more stupid than l thought.
Or are you lying yet again?
And l back lslander1.
Give us the names of the supposed Argentines who were supposedly evicted.
You made the accusation, now put up or shut up.
And stop lying, it does you no credit.
Marcos- yes do please explain your victory? Seems from the statement that Arg will have to back off and drop her old fashioned imperialistic colonial claim to take over a country and its people AGAINST their free and democractically expressed wish.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 11:04 am - Link - Report abuse 0Have you not found out yet that in today,s 21st century world it is PEOPLE who count - not who did, or did not, do what to who a few centuries ago!
@113 Frank... I want to bring your eye to rest on the following ....
Jan 18th, 2013 - 11:06 am - Link - Report abuse 041. Recall the 2005 UN Summit Outcome Document and the responsibility of each Member State to protect its population from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity
So, we have to protect 'our' BOT populations from these 4 things, which is basically a set of traits we would associated with the Argentines. I love the way that they're calling Ban Ki Moon a liar, again.
All these 'developing' nations seem to do is call Ban Ki Moon a liar, without actually having read UNGA Resolution 31/49. Poor Ban Ki Moon.
@118 Vestige
Jan 18th, 2013 - 11:24 am - Link - Report abuse 0and a political map of England looks almost entirely blue, yet Cameron needs a coalition to rule - because constituency boundaries relate to voter numbers not area. In your various posts you quote evidence that a UI is imminent. But under the Good Friday Agreement you could have one tomorrow provided there is a likely prospect of it passing a referendum. It's not British imperialism preventing a UI, it's the lack of desire for one in NI (between 7 and 30%). Your post box might well be green, but the picture on the stamps going into it is unlikely to change for the forseeable future. Regarding finances, while the UK subvention for NI is particularly high, the level per person is almost identical to that for Wales (which did not suffer 30 years of terrorism) - that's just how countries work. How does it work in Argentina? Does every region pay its way or are some poor and others rich?
what we do has nothing but nothing to do with any other south american countrie,
Jan 18th, 2013 - 11:41 am - Link - Report abuse 0they should worry about their own mess before condeming others..
#123
Jan 18th, 2013 - 11:52 am - Link - Report abuse 0Definition of vestige
1. A visible trace, evidence, or sign of something that once existed but exists or appears no more.
2. Biology A rudimentary or degenerate, usually nonfunctioning, structure that is the remnant of an organ or part that was fully developed or functioning in a preceding generation or an earlier stage of development.
I think that sums it up nicely.
Hmmm
Jan 18th, 2013 - 12:50 pm - Link - Report abuse 0http://i50.tinypic.com/qn4cxu.jpg
@21 But neither arsieland, nor YOU, will be around to see it. That's a promise!
Jan 18th, 2013 - 01:12 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@24 But arsies always lie! There aren't, and never have been, any Chagossians. What there was was slaves imported by the French. And, latterly, Mauritian contract workers. Neither of who ever owned so much as a grain of sand. But arsies like to lie. It's the only thing they do well. They think!
@79 Wow! Now you are even lying to yourself. It is true that there seems to be a tiny percentage of teenage Falkland Islanders who would like to experience arsie big city life. We can deal with that. Neutron bombs. Loads of arsie cities, but no arsies. Ideal! Thought you didn't want any responses, liar. So why post? I think whorewhisperer is right. CFK IS a whore. And who suppressed the evidence on how she murdered her husband? Was it YOU?
@87 Nope. A capable, vengeful nation. YOU killed 255 British servicemen and 3 Falkland Islanders. YOU have yet to PAY for that. I reckon ONE British serviceman or ONE Falkland Islander is worth 100,000 arsies. I make that nearly 26 million arsies. And then, from the remainder, we'll pick those that we consider to be war criminals and execute them.
@89 Typical unintelligible garbage from an arsie psycho. Have you tried medication? Strychnine is quite good. Don't swallow more than a kilo.
@95 Even if that were true, which it isn't, so what? Where did you find this list? In the cattle section? Or did arsieland make a habit of naming and listing rats and other vermin?
@99 Would that be Gaucho Rivero the murderer? Says a lot about arsieland that it reveres a homicidal maniac.
@106 And Britain says that anyone who tries to impose their wishes on the Falkland Islands will die. Comment?
@118 So? The UK is letting Ireland play at being a country. Not doing too well are they? Greedy and stupid. As we have always known the Irish to be. Difficult to distinguish them from arsies. Pig shit is world-beating by comparison!
@128
Jan 18th, 2013 - 03:43 pm - Link - Report abuse 0hi sussie
@vestige
Jan 18th, 2013 - 05:52 pm - Link - Report abuse 0This article and this thread, have nothing to do with Ireland.
Pure diversion.
Back on topic please.
(101) Islander1
Jan 18th, 2013 - 07:53 pm - Link - Report abuse 0You say:
”Think- Glad we agree that the River Plate militia and their families were indeed ordered to leave.”
May I ask:
If we ”agree” about the fact that 75% of the Argentinean population (thirty-eight (38) men, thirteen (13) women and eight (8) children) were ”indeed ordered to leave” by the British in 1833, under threats of being bombed to oblivion …….
Why do you write at (67)…:”Please dont start the lying CFK crap about population being booted out in 1833 - we all know it did not happen”?
You ask further…:
”Now squatters - really - how can the descendents of people who prior to Jan 1833 were here under the River Plate authority (or whatever Arg was then) be squatters?
Do please explain the difference between them - and say anyone of European descent who lived in what is now Arg - prior to 1810?”
I say …:
I have explained this point to you and others previously on these pages….
The great difference is ***ALLEGIANCE***.
All of South-America’s immigrant descendants show full allegiance to their respective South-American National States…..
You British Squatters in Malvinas, on the other hand, show full allegiance to the UK, an Alien Northern Hemisphere Nuclear Armed Bully with crystal clear geo-political territorial ambitions in the South-Atlantic and the Antarctic ......
(118) Vestige
Nice to hear somebody contesting the ” English Turnips” in here…..
Be it about Ireland or the Islas Malvinas……
(120) lsolde
1) I don’t know if El Gaucho Rivero was a hero or not…..
What I know is that he was lied to, cheated, and deprived of his freedom by the British …
And that he reacted as any Gaucho would have reacted in 1833…. By pulling his knife and defending himself…
2) You want the names of the Argentines who were evicted, you say ?
Again ???
That list has been posted innumerable times in here by me (and others)….
Try to keep up, honey…
We have turnips enough in here......; the last thing we need is a tiny blue-eyed simple flaxen…;-)
And that he reacted as any Gaucho would have reacted in 1833…. By pulling his knife and defending himself…
Jan 18th, 2013 - 08:27 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Then whilst still acting in self defence, he raped his attackers wife in front of her children.”
That should help people decide whether he's a hero or not!
Well, Alte Think, if that list has been posted, then you will have no trouble in posting it again for those of us who missed it the last time.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 09:17 pm - Link - Report abuse 0So, my dear Think, l offer a direct challenge to your lordship, the Turnip-in-Chief.
1) Post the list of Argentines evicted or
2) Shut up about it after apologising to everyone for lying & wasting their time.
All those injustices, that happened to Rivero were done in the name of Vernet as you well know.
The Gauchos prefered to work for the British as they would be treated fairly & paid in silver.
Back to school for you sr Think, to learn the correct history, not that rubbish you learned in Argentina.
ZOPACAS .... looks like a Miss World contest
Jan 18th, 2013 - 09:26 pm - Link - Report abuse 0.... sounds like a herd of llamas.
.........................................
*South* Atlantic.
The llamas from the *Northern hemisphere are:
Benin, Cape Verde, Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Equatorial Guinea, Liberia, , Nigeria, Senegal, Togo, Guinea-Bissau, Saint Tomé and Principe and Sierra Leone.
The absent llamas are the island-states of the South Atlantic:
TFI, TdeC, Ascension, St. H, etc.
Island states are not welcome in their own ocean, it seems;
and the herd is packed with Northern coastliners.
@130
Jan 18th, 2013 - 09:42 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Self-defence, gaucho style
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Thomas_Helsby%27s_Account_of_the_Port_Louis_Murders
Malvinistas are to language, as electrodes are to democracy.
111 Lord Ton “Another victory” - pray tell, when was the first one ???
Jan 18th, 2013 - 09:54 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Roger
1806
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/4779479.stm
You want to read it again mate, pay attention to this paragraph.
Jan 18th, 2013 - 10:08 pm - Link - Report abuse 0On 27 June 1806 a British force of 1,500 men under William Carr Beresford occupied the city, for about six weeks until surrendering in mid-August to colonial militia, led by Santiago de Liniers y Bremond, * a French nobleman at the service of Spain.”*
Sounds like a Spanish victory to me!
130 Think - I agreed that the Militia and their families were ordered to leave - they had only ben there 3-4 months! You said how many - you may be correct.What IS more relevant though is the number of civilian settlers who stayed on- voluntarily- and thus accepted British rule. Your memory seesm to be a bit vague on this one!
Jan 18th, 2013 - 10:12 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Allegiance - calm down old chap- the recent survey here showed that a lot of us Islanders have our first Allegiance to - The Falkland Islands - just the same as you no doubt have to Argentina.
We can overlook the minor issue that your ancestors murdered most of the original inhabitants for now!
However a simple fact - when you are only a 3000 populations and under continual threat of a full takeover by a country of 40million plus who have made it clear that our wishes are irrelevant and that they would use military force to takeover if there was no defence against them - well surely even Think would want to align also with a friendly nation who offers protection from the baddy!
Lets face reality - one day when we have the population and economic base - we will ask UK for Independence - UK will grant it.
If we became an Arg Colony and one day asked for Independence - what would Buenos Aires say?
Marcos- do please read some history- 1806 was an attack against SPANISH territory and Britain and Spain were at war - had 0% to do with the Islands - and Argentina did not exist anyway!
@135
Jan 18th, 2013 - 10:31 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Got anything from the last century? Or is it just the one before that?
(132) lsolde
Jan 18th, 2013 - 10:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0You didn't say Please......
(133) GeoffWard2
You say….:
Island States are not welcome in their own ocean
I say....:
There are no Island States in the South Atlantic....
(137) Islander1
You say…:
”What IS more relevant though is the number of civilian settlers who stayed on- voluntarily- and thus accepted British rule. Your memory seems to be a bit vague on this one!”
I say…:
Please…. refresh my memory and mention the names of the people that stayed on them Islands….
Please…. remember to substract Mr.Antonio Rivero, Mr. Jose Maria Luna, Mr.Juan Brasido, Mr. Manuel Gonzales, Mr. Luciano Flores, Mr. Manuel Godoy, Mr. Felipe Salagar & Mr. Lattorre…; the Indios and Gauchos coerced to stay in them Islands that soon rebelled against the cheating, lying, pirating Brits.
Please….. remember to substract the two slave negresses too…. They didn’t get a chanche to choose, did they?
How many have we so?....
What were their names?...
@139
Jan 18th, 2013 - 11:08 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Does this help?
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Thomas_Helsby%27s_Account_of_the_Port_Louis_Murders/Residents_of_Port_Louis_as_of_26_August_1833
Now, it shouldn't be too hard, given this list, the logs of the Clio and Sarandi, and the records of Vernet's contracts supposedly held in the Argentine National Archives, to come up with a list of names of those expelled who weren't members of the intruding garrison.
Funny this hasn't been done already, but I guess it's a redundant effort if you're only targeting the credulous.
@133 ZOPACAS .... looks like a Miss World contest
Jan 19th, 2013 - 12:16 am - Link - Report abuse 0I will say this about them though. LATAMs do upstage the Eurogals. (But the lady from Argentina looks rather like she should be pestering Sleeping Beauty).
Warning, links contain Miss Universe (sorry not Miss World) costumes and catty commentary the latter of which has swear words.
http://www.tomandlorenzo.com/2012/12/miss-universe-national-costume-2012-part-1.html
http://www.tomandlorenzo.com/2012/12/miss-universe-national-costume-2012-part-1.html
http://www.tomandlorenzo.com/2012/12/miss-universe-national-costume-2012-part-1.html
137 Islander1 BBC
Jan 19th, 2013 - 12:32 am - Link - Report abuse 0”A second, better-resourced invasion followed in May 1807, under Lieutenant-General John Whitelock, attacking Buenos Aires in July. After a couple of days of intense street fighting, the British surrendered to an army it had considered no more than a rabble.
After losing more than half his force, the British signed a ceasefire on 7 July and left for home, where Whitelock was court-martialled and discharged.
(Read this part carefully)
War often defines nationhood: just as America was said to have come of age in 1776, when British colonists declared their independence from the Crown, so Argentina felt it had come of age as a separate state, having fought for themselves against the British
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
Marcos- yep- Britain attacked the Spanish territory twice- correct - your point is? Britain attacked Montevideo as well about same time- still a street named there where they were stopped I believe.
Jan 19th, 2013 - 02:03 am - Link - Report abuse 0I recall talking about it with a senior Arg Naval officer in the Islands late 1970s(when we were all reasonable friendly) He reckoned biggest silly mistake ever made was beating off the Brits then! Had UK won and stayed then Arg would have been a colony like Australia and by now long since Independent, English speaking,with a stable democratic system and stable economy etc etc - and a very very rich nation - and with us as part of it! He was right!
Think - there were 22 who accepted the offer of staying in the Islands - none were co-erced. 5 others left for a few months on business or family affairs and returned a few months later, so you could say 27.
Of the 22
more than 50% were Argentines;
12 Argentines
4 Charrua Indians from Uruguay
2 Brits
2 Germans
1 French
1 Jamaica
4 left of their own free will:
Joaquin Acuna and Juana,
Mateo Gonzalez and Maria
both were gaucho families who worked for Vernet.
2 others left also but they had only just arrived on the Sarandi anyway so were actually listed as foreigners or non residents A Jose Viel and Juan Qualy
Will give you the names and what happened to them as far as is known tomorrow.
143 Islander1
Jan 19th, 2013 - 07:19 am - Link - Report abuse 0English speaking,with a stable democratic system and stable economy etc etc - and a very very rich nation - and with us as part of it!
Do you mean broke like Britain?
You said and with us as part of it!
So you are saying that we are not together because the British failed to invade Buenos Aires and succeeded to invade Malvinas in 1833?
@142
Jan 19th, 2013 - 07:43 am - Link - Report abuse 0I am sure this news from 1807 will come as a great shock to all those who believed that Britain never once lost a single battle anywhere.
@142 “War often defines nationhood: just as America was said to have come of age in 1776, when British colonists declared their independence from the Crown, so Argentina felt it had come of age as a separate state, having fought for themselves against the British”
Jan 19th, 2013 - 09:09 am - Link - Report abuse 0... and just like in 1982 the Falkland Islanders fought against the Argentines and their colonial pretensions of land theft. That was pretty much the defining stroke in the defining of the nation of the Falklands, and an end to any negotiations.
1833 wasn't an invasion, it was an eviction. Get over it.
@139 Think,
Jan 19th, 2013 - 09:32 am - Link - Report abuse 0OK, Think, l'll play your game & it doesn't hurt at all.
Please provide us lesser mortals with the list of the Argentines who you say were expelled from the Falkland lslands, by the British in 1833.
Please, please me by providing this list, please.
Now don't try to wriggle out of this one, Think & don't ignore me.
Your credibility is now on the line, dear Think.
So please provide the above mentioned list.
l await your revelations with bated breath.
Merci
@144 Marcos
Jan 19th, 2013 - 11:16 am - Link - Report abuse 0No rich and prosperous like Australia. But you have missed any possible chance of that.
@ Think (rarely able to actually do it though)
I'm surprised you aren't claiming that the troops in 1982 weren't also ethnically cleaned and usurped from their land.
On 6th October 1832 a 26 man Argentinean garrison arrived aboard the Sarandí. They bought with them their 11 wives and 8 children). They left on 4th January 1833.
That's exactly 90 days.
In 1982 Argentina's 'garrison' only lasted 72 days.
Twice you have tried and twice you have failed. You can't ethnically cleanse an armed force.
Marcos how the snow in your part of the UK?
Jan 19th, 2013 - 11:33 am - Link - Report abuse 0@146 shedtime
Jan 19th, 2013 - 04:24 pm - Link - Report abuse 0They did get over the 1833 eviction. From 1850 to 1941 it was never mentioned again in the Presidential Address, this is why their claims to sovereignty is complete hogwash.
Marcos-144 - In 1833 UK evicted an bunch of militia squatters and their families who had been in the Islands for about 3 months. You cannot invade territory that is actually already yours anyway.
Jan 19th, 2013 - 04:37 pm - Link - Report abuse 01806-07 - yes an attack and attempt at invasion
1833 - eviction of squatters - civilians invited to stay and most did
1982 2nd April Invasion by Argentina
1982 - 14th June - eviction by UK of those invading squatters.
Understand the difference
the union flag flys over stanley bloody marvellous
Jan 19th, 2013 - 05:09 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Get over it mugs
I have a 1,000,000 peso note, it cost one $US. Where should I put it on the betting on the FI referendum?
Jan 19th, 2013 - 05:43 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Where do the Welsh settlements in Patagonia figure in all this? Should Patagonia be a Welsh colony?
151 Islander1
Jan 19th, 2013 - 06:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0My British squatter did you forget your failure of 1845?
Britain must very a very ugly place to live if you consider they invaded my country so many times, and failed most of the time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Vuelta_de_Obligado
My Argentine squatter.
Jan 19th, 2013 - 06:47 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Still not reading your links porperly again I see.
Therefore the *Anglo-French victory* did not achieve their economic objectives. It proved to be practically impossible to sail Argentine rivers without the authorisation of Argentinian authorities.
Anglo French Victory I believe it says!
Interesting reading, this must be where your navy learned the tactical benefit of running away from the RN and there was me thing the Falklands. was the first time they buggered off, when facing a real navy.
After the failure of the expedition to the Parana, Ouseley wrote to his government requesting 10,000 British soldiers, 10,000 French soldiers and an open declaration of war to conclude the conflict. However, unknown to him, Tomás Samuel Hood was already navigating to Buenos Aires with the opposite instructions from the allied countries: negotiate an end to the hostilities, at whatever price Rosas demanded
Jan 19th, 2013 - 06:58 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Britain would return the stolen ships, the Martín García island, remove their troops from Uruguay, accept the Argentine sovereignty over its internal waters, and condition the whole treaty to the approval of Oribe. Finally, the British navy would make a 21-gun salute to the flag of Argentina.
Sounds like another British failure to me.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-French_blockade_of_the_R%C3%ADo_de_la_Plata
Wiki shows the result was an Anglo French victory. You posted the link, read it, columb on the right, with all the statistics of the battle forces, engaged, casualties, etc.
Jan 19th, 2013 - 07:05 pm - Link - Report abuse 0France and the United Kingdom eventually lifted the blockade and dropped their attempts to bypass Buenos Aires' policies. They acknowledged the Argentine government's legal right over the Paraná and other internal rivers, and its authority to determine who had access to it, in exchange for the withdrawal of Rosas's army from Uruguay.
Seems you also withdrew from Uruguay, hardly a victory, or did that part of the history conveniently slip by you?
still lives in the past.
Jan 19th, 2013 - 07:43 pm - Link - Report abuse 0The article made interesting reading, Argentina withholding payment to an English bank made me chuckle and the British of course putting profit ahead of their support for the French. Argentina did come out on top, but not as great victory they like to paint. In fact, militarily they had their asses handed to them, nothing changed there then.
Jan 19th, 2013 - 07:56 pm - Link - Report abuse 0”Luis Alberto Romero considers that the importance of the battle is overrated because it was a defeat: the Anglo-French navy destroyed the artilleries and proceed to the north, as they wanted to do. The end of the blockade in favourable terms to the Confederation was more the result of a change of policy by the Foreign Office after the appointment of Lord Palmerston than a success of Rosas' diplomacy.
Amazes me, nothing changed in 160 years. What they can not win militarily they think they can gain by politicing.
Well it aint goung to work this time.
It all boils down to the fact, Argentina is almost bankrupt,
Jan 19th, 2013 - 08:20 pm - Link - Report abuse 0CFK is in big trouble, and using the innocent people of the Falklands as hostages to argentine economic incompetence,
They never learn..
.
Think
Jan 19th, 2013 - 08:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I agree with your numbers concerning how many left the islands in January 1833. 59 people.
Of those 59 people, How many had arrived in the islands for the first time in November 1832? Is that in your National Records?
My information tells me it was 55.
More did arrive in November 1832 but went missing. What happened to Esteban Mestevier and his wife?
So your population was actually on the islands for 3 months. None of them indigenous, none of them ethnic islanders
Today's islanders have been there 180 years, most born there, many going back multiple generations.
Hmmm....3 months military garrison versus 180 years peaceful settlement.
Have you any idea how ridiculous you sound.
marcos- do not know the answer to your question as I do not live in Britain, also although I am proud to hold a British passport - I am first and foremost a Falkland Islander.
Jan 19th, 2013 - 09:11 pm - Link - Report abuse 01845 - who was that against/?Britain has fought many many battles over the centuries - lost a few of them as well - but (other than USA in 1770s) she always has won the most important battle - the LAST one of a war or conflict!
Today Britain lives in the 21st Century, along with the rest of the civilized world - where people and their rights count - sadly Argentina still lives in the 19th century era of Colonial expansion.
@161 sorry mate stink doesn't think it just gobs off and posts mince that he/it has been brainwashed with. It pretends to be clever but constantly contradicts itself and talks shite when you actually present the facts that it doesn't agree with. All this whilst living in northern europe eh Guzz
Jan 19th, 2013 - 09:13 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Slattzzz
Jan 19th, 2013 - 10:12 pm - Link - Report abuse 0In that Think happily states that 59 people left in January 1833 and this is in the Malvinista official records, then it is great news.
We know that the majority of these arrived just three months earlier, in the contested penal colony or military garrison under Mestevier.
Surely, not even the most rabid nonsense speaker would claim this was a population, let alone an argentine population or an indigenous population or a civilian population...it might be better called an invasionary force or a blatant act of 19th century colonialism.
So...how many arrived with Mestevier? How many we're murdered during the mutiny? How many left with Pinedo?
The number you are left with is how many of Vernets group left (four??)
Of course you can then get into the debate whether the four years Vernets group were there constitutes a population, and indeed whether they were Argentine (they weren't!!).
But Think has inadvertently destroyed all the Malvinista arguments with his national archive post.
Pity he didn't Think...chuckle chuckle.
@162 I would agree, but there is also an element of the Falklands having to be dragged into the 21st Century in order to deal with the fact that your neighbour is basically a 'bit sh!t'. You folks in those islands need to get involved politically and socially in order to grow yourselves into something that can stand up on it's own feet economically in order to prevent further actions from the imbecile who lives next door.
Jan 19th, 2013 - 10:14 pm - Link - Report abuse 0I know that this is currently happening, but without the youth getting involved it's just going to be more soft leather chairs, pipes, and waiting for mother England to come sailing over the oceans rather than .... basically Australia 1.1.
@165
Jan 19th, 2013 - 10:33 pm - Link - Report abuse 0By 2019 the islands will be very rich and perfectly able to stand on their own two feet and pay for their own defence...Not reliant on anyone.
(161) Monkeymagic
Jan 19th, 2013 - 10:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0You say…:
”Have you any idea how ridiculous you sound.”
I say…:
Not more ridiculous than you telling me that…: ”Most of the Islanders are born in them Islands”….. when their very own census tells us that there are less than 40% Island born Kelpers in them Islands….
Furthermore…….., half of those 40% are first generation….
Not more ridiculous than you Brits, pretending that the UK has any right whatsoever over any Antarctic territory, South Atlantic Islands or South Atlantic waters adjacent to Argentina….
If you Brits need or want a piece of Antarctica or some Southern Islands…..… then take them back from your Convict Ex-Colonies of Australia or New Zealand, where you have crystal-clear historical, legal and genetic rights….. and leave us South-Americans in peace.
You have no business down here……, non whatsoever.
@167 We have every reason to be 'down there' as we're there protecting what doesn't belong to you, from you. We have all the rights to those places you mentioned, and you quite frankly have none.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 12:17 am - Link - Report abuse 0Do you know how ridiculous you sound, all riddled with expansionism and greed?
The Atlantic belongs to the Atlantic nations, not the South Americans. Get back to your wars and leave the Atlantic alone, nazi scum.
162 Islander1 Today Britain lives in the 21st Century
Jan 20th, 2013 - 12:34 am - Link - Report abuse 0Oh yes, your colonial governor Nigel Haywood is a perfect example of that lol.
@167
Jan 20th, 2013 - 12:49 am - Link - Report abuse 0Leave South America in peace. Do not make me laugh! What the hell happened in 1982?
If you did not have the convenient Falkland Islands and the British to vent your exspansionist tendancies at, you would be turning your attention elsewhere, towards your neighbours.
They know that and despite what they say to your face, they are loving every single minute of it. Laughing at you behind your back and thanking god for Islands and their British connections.
They know. you do not worry us and they know we are more than capable, as comprehensibly demonstrated, of dealing with the likes of you. While your distracted with us, you are leaving them alone.
Here's some more news for you. You are called Argentina, not South America but to hear you talk, you think you are the entire continent.
Leave you in peace! why don't you take your own advice and leave the Islanders in peace.
Think - here we are, my best shot at who voluntarily stayed in the Islands in Jan 1833:
Jan 20th, 2013 - 12:58 am - Link - Report abuse 0Mathew Brisbane (Vernet,s superintendent) went to Islands in 1828- mudered 26 Aug 1833-buried at port Louis.
William Dickson - Vernet,s storekeeper - murdered 26th August 1833 buried Port Louis.
Charles Kussler - still there 1837 unknown after.
Antonio Vehingar/Wagner- employee of vernet- murdered 26th August buried Port Louis
Jean/Juan Simon Capitaz- employed by vernet, fathered a child with Carmelite-murdered 26th August 1833, buried Port Louis.
Antonio Rivero - murderer
Jose Maria Luna - murderer
Juan Brasido - murderer
Manuel Gonzalez - murderer
Lusiano Flores - murderer
Manuel Godoy - murderer
Felipe Salagar - murderer
Lattorre - murderer
Antonia Roxa - arrived cerca 1830 became naturalised British subject 1841,died 1865 buried grave no B238 Stanley cemetery
Gregoria Madrid - shows in our 1846 census as an Arg citizen, died 1871 buried Stanley cemetery grave no A169
Carmelita- arrived 1826 with vernet,had a son 1831 with Juan Simon another with Matthew Coronel in 1833 and a 3rd with Richard penny 1837.Died 1845 buried at Port Louis.
Jose Simon- son of Carmelita last mentioned 1858
Manuel Coronel - son of carmelita, last mentioned 1851.
Jose Manuel Prado
Honest John - (a man of colour? - presumably from africa?)
Antonio Manuel - a man of colour as above I guess?
Santiago Lopez - gaucho
Faustin Martinez - gaucho
Pascual Diego - gaucho
Manuel Coronel - had a child with Carmelita buried Port Louis 1841.
Those who were not recorded in the censuses of the 1840s are assumed to have left prior to the census - but they were there in 1833!
Sort of buggers your President and Foreign Ministers shouts that all were evicted in Jan 1833 - when any tourist can come today and see the named graves of some of them!!!!
This list above is as accurate as possible - the definative list of who was here and stayed is held by the central records office in London.
Islander1
Jan 20th, 2013 - 01:17 am - Link - Report abuse 0You could provide original signed documents with photographic evidence and they would not care a toss. They only believe what they are told to believe, I was going to say, want they want to believe. That would be silly though, they are incapable of individual or rational thought.
167 Think
Jan 20th, 2013 - 02:49 am - Link - Report abuse 0''Furthermore…….., half of those 40% are first generation….''
Is there a point to that statement?
Are you really saying you might not be a real Falkland Islander even if you were born here to parents with Falkland Island Status?
What does that make you then?
And this from the nation that shipped a woman to Antarctica specifically to give birth to a native Argentine 'Antarctican.
Wasn't it you whining on a while back about our restrictive immigration policy? About how we won't let anyone settle in the Falkland Islands? Oh, apart from the 60% of Falkland Islands residents who were born somewhere else.
Can I just ask you if that figure refers to status holders or everyone who was in the islands on census night?
@167
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:42 am - Link - Report abuse 0Thank you at long last for putting the real Argentine case instead of all the comic knockabout concerning Popes, inheritances never left to you, expulsions that never happened, treaties that do say what they don't say and don't say what they do say, migrating birds, and the rest of the Malvinista canon.
Now we know that anglophobia confers sovereignity, I'm only surprised you didn't tell us sooner.
@167 Think,
Jan 20th, 2013 - 10:20 am - Link - Report abuse 0l haven't gone away, Cher Think & you are not off the hook.
Please provide your list of Argentines, who you say were evicted from these(not them)Falkland lslands, by the British, in 1833.
You said that you could & its the main plank of your argument, SO, what are you waiting for?
You can do this, can't you, Cher Think?
You're not bluffing or........dare l say it! Lying are you dear Thinkus?
List, please!
Thanking you in anticipation, from Me.
************************************************************
The South Atlantic does not belong to Argentina & we will sail here if we want to.
We have plenty of business here & its got absolutely nothing to do with Argentina or anyone else.
We were navigating these waters when your country just consisted of land around BsAs. Just who do you think you are?
And FYI, New Zealand was never a penal colony.
You really need to brush up on your history, Cher Think.
Hate to rain on your parade but, Argentine history books are very unreliable.
Oh & before l forget, l'm waiting for that list, please. Peace♥
It is hilarious that Think should ask the British to leave south America in peace.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 10:37 am - Link - Report abuse 0What choice did the ethnic South Americans have to be left in peace when Thinks ancestors slaughtered them, as recently as a clear case of 19th century colonialism in Patagonia? Was that genocide over hundreds of years leaving South Americans in peace Think?
Or perhaps the 1982 invasion of the Falklands, was that leaving South America in peace Think?
I notice you didn't respond to my question of how many of your 59 souls who left in January 1833, had only arrived in November 1832 for the first time? What does your National Archive say Think? (its interesting as Malvinero1 would have us believe there were thousands of Argentines evicted”)
It really winds you up doesn't it Think?
How can a couple of thousand Islanders continue to humiliate the great Argentina? how can they keep you from your expansionist ideals? How can the UN allow this? How can they have 300-500 million barrels of oil already? how can they be richer than you, more dignified than you, have a prouder heritage than you?
How can a couple of thousand people do this Think??? Chuckle chuckle.
(171) Islander1
Jan 20th, 2013 - 01:03 pm - Link - Report abuse 0You say:
”This list above is as accurate as possible”
I say:
Yes, I ”Think” it is.
A far cry from your original comment at (67) though:
”Please don’t start the lying CFK crap about population being booted out in 1833 - we all know it did not happen.”
Sooo; we seem to agree upon:
1) Fifty-nine (59) souls where deported by British military might from them Islands.
2) Twenty-six (26) souls “chose” to stay on them Islands.
However; from your list of 26 persons that “chose” to stay I would, for obvious reasons, subtract:
a) The five (5) European citizens, designated by the British as the new leadership of the Colony:
Irish William Dickson, Scot Mathew Brisbane, French Jean Simon, German Charles Russler & Anthony Wagner.
b) The eight (8) Gauchos & Indians kept on them Islands by false British promises that soon rebelled…:
Antonio Rivero, Jose Maria Luna, Juan Brasido, Manuel Gonzalez, Lusiano Flores, Manuel Godoy, Felipe Salagar & M. Latorre.
c) The two (2) enslaved negresses mentioned in Darwin’s Diary; Gregoria Madrid & Carmelita + her two (2) baby sons, Jose Simon & Manuel Coronel.
d) The two “Black Men”, Honest John & Victor Manuel, both escapee slaves from American ships.
That leaves us with just seven (7) Argentineans that stayed voluntarily under British occupation.
Less than 10% of the original settlement.
(173) Monty96
You ask:
''Furthermore.., half of those 40% are first generation... Is there a point to that statement?”
I say:
The point was to rebut poster (161) Monkeymagic false argument when he proclaims that…:
”Today's islanders have been there 180 years, MOST BORN THERE”
(175) lsolde
You say:
“Please provide your list of Argentines, who you say were evicted from them lslands, by the British in 1833.”
I say:
I’m not a ”Information Office” for dumb blondes.
Try to keep up girl; everybody else in them Islands (Islander1, Monty96 etc.) does.
(Clue: The ”lizt” ain’t on your 1990’s Macquarie Highschool Dictionary, dhaling :-)
Think - All those Europeans were there prior to 1833 WITH the approval of The Brits - Vernett had ought UK permission to establish his operations there. Well we can disagree I guess if it was 7 or 12 Argentine nationals who stayed.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 01:31 pm - Link - Report abuse 0But it does BLOW OUT OF THE WATER THE OUTRIGHT LIE peddled for years by your Govt that all Argentines were booted out!
The only ones booted out were those who had been there for about 90 days maximum!
@177 So you're basically agreeing that the current population has a basis from the people who were settled on the islands originally. Well done you.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 01:32 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Then in 1982 you started the War of Aggression, and lost the war, and any claim to the islands under international law.
Lost on two points there. Well done you.
(175) lsolde
Jan 20th, 2013 - 01:36 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Besides the twenty-two members of the garrison and their families. This included seven murderers. There where four civilians that left, two that might have been Argentinean.
@177 Think
Jan 20th, 2013 - 01:38 pm - Link - Report abuse 0”The five (5) European citizens, designated by the British as the new leadership of the Colony:
Irish William Dickson, Scot Mathew Brisbane, French Jean Simon, German Charles Russler & Anthony Wagner
Why should they be excluded ?
The two (2) enslaved negresses mentioned in Darwin’s Diary; Gregoria Madrid & Carmelita + her two (2) baby sons, Jose Simon & Manuel Coronel.
What proof do you have that they were enslaved by the British? and why should the be excluded?
The two “Black Men”, Honest John & Victor Manuel, both escapee slaves from American ships.”
Why should they be excluded - just because they ere black ?
@180 So in summary... if we discount: a) the members of the garrison who were quite legitimately evicted as a foreign occupational force; b) their families; c) murderers; and d) non argentines. We get 2 argentines who were evicted.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 01:43 pm - Link - Report abuse 0then if we, for the minute, accept Think's discussions on who was actually argentine, being 7 people that left.
So 2 out of 9 were evicted (22%).... leaving 78% of the Argentine settlers remaining.
Think has basically agreed with us that KFC, and her friends at the Front for Fail are liars. Well done Think.
(178) Islander1
Jan 20th, 2013 - 03:55 pm - Link - Report abuse 0You say...:
But it does BLOW OUT OF THE WATER THE OUTRIGHT LIE peddled for years by your Govt. that all Argentines were booted out!
I say....:
What it does BLOW OUT OF THE WATER IS THE OUTRIGHT LIE peddled since recently by your FIG(leaf) that no Argentineans were booted out in 1833....
A DEMONSTRABLE OUTRIGHT LIE repeated by you at your above comment No.:67....
Besides......Would you be so kind to guide me to any document, link or reference where the Argentinean Government says that ALL Argentineans were booted out by the Brits in 1833?
Just one?
One?
183 Think
Jan 20th, 2013 - 04:02 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Ms Fernandez says her letter is published on the same date - 3 January - when, 180 years ago: ”Argentina was forcibly stripped of the Malvinas Islands, which are situated 14,000 km (8,700 miles) away from London.
She goes on: The Argentines on the Islands were expelled by the Royal Navy”
http://image.guardian.co.uk/sys-files/Guardian/documents/2013/01/02/A025BE01F03.pdf
Hi El Think
Jan 20th, 2013 - 04:26 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Still up to your old tricks
!! What it does BLOW OUT OF THE WATER IS THE OUTRIGHT LIE peddled since recently by your FIG(leaf) that no Argentineans were booted out in 1833.... !!
You know very well that the the phrase actually used was No Argentinian settlers were were asked to leave the Islands
The only Argentinians expelled were those of the military garrison.
But what the heck, that would not fit in with your story
The book The last Colonies by Robert Aldrich and John Connell page 200
Jan 20th, 2013 - 04:40 pm - Link - Report abuse 01833 ' The Brithish commander raise the Union Jack, claimed possession of the islands and expelled the Argentinians.
”The Falklands officially became a Crown colony in 1840, a governor and a few Scotsmen arrived to establish a British pastoral settlement. Argentina hotly disputed the Brithish takeover, and Buenos Aires made continual diplomatic representations over the next 150 years to recover the islands”
Think- as explained by others- We and UK have NEVER dewnied that UK booted out the recently arrived militia and their dependents.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 04:44 pm - Link - Report abuse 0We and UK have ALWAYS stated that the civilian population was given free choice - leave of your free choice or you are wlecome to stay under British rule. I think that fact is even noted on the Arg Historical records of the time.
If you can dispute this - please give some public evidence?
Oh and by the way you mentioned slaves - not sure what the Arg position was but those folks were free citizens in the Islands as Uk had outlawed slavery several decades before 1833.
As for exact no of Argentines - our records go by their freely expressed nationality at the time of asking.
For Islolde _ will name those who left tomorrow.
@177
Jan 20th, 2013 - 05:05 pm - Link - Report abuse 0How interesting. So by your own reasoning, less than a third of the Vernet settlement in 1833 can be considered Argentines.
How does this support your sovereignity claim, exactly?
Islander1
Jan 20th, 2013 - 05:12 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Thinks argument is that the militia that arrived in November 1832 constituted a population by January 1833.
His view is that if you spend 3 months somewhere than you become part of the population, irrespective of anyone else's prior claim or title.
However, if you and your ancestors spend 180 years somewhere, then you don't get to become part of a population, irrespective of anybody else claim or title.
Coming back to your original point....
Of the 59 (thinks numbers from his National Archive) who were forcibly evicted, how many arrived just 2-3months earlier for the first time as part of a militia? How many were part of the 4 year civilian settlement.
I think it's 55 to the 3-month brigade and 4 to the civilians. That being the case, and the other 22 remaining (including some British according to Think) suggests the four weren't forced to do anything.
Excellent debate. Think should swap sides..he's destroyed the Malvinista argument in one swoop....chuckle chuckle
@189 Think's failed attempts to befuddle the fact that his people are just liars is quite amusing. Basically he's just accepted that no argentines were forced to leave the British colony, and those that were asked to leave were an illegally occupying force.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 05:35 pm - Link - Report abuse 0So, after spending time explaining his analysis he's just verified and agreed with the British historical position. Well done us!
(187) Islander1
Jan 20th, 2013 - 05:48 pm - Link - Report abuse 0In the XIX Century, all the fringe territories of the Americas, north as south were being settled on similar manner….
Small military outposts where the soldiers and their families doubled as settlers…..
Even so, you Brits have the Chutzpah of lying to the World that “No Expulsion” took place because you only kicked some “Military and their Dependents”……
I wonder how many people would be left in Malvinas today if somebody kicked all Military & Ex-Military, Militia & Ex-Militia, Crown Servants & Ex Crown Servants together with all their dependents out of them Islands?
A couple of hundreds at best….
Mostly Chileans and Saints….
Its about time for DoD to come on-line a change the subject.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 05:48 pm - Link - Report abuse 0@191
Jan 20th, 2013 - 06:41 pm - Link - Report abuse 0They weren't booted out because they were settlers, but because they were the occupying forces of a foreign state.
Think #
Jan 20th, 2013 - 06:49 pm - Link - Report abuse 0your arguments are getting even weaker
any answers to my posts @181 & @184
#191
Jan 20th, 2013 - 06:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0”I wonder how many people would be left in Malvinas -(Falklands)”
Enough to deal with you bunch of tossers !
Think
Jan 20th, 2013 - 06:57 pm - Link - Report abuse 0They'd only been there 3 months.
The Argentine is unravelling around you.
Argentina and the Malvinistas trawl around the world spreading a myth, a myth that most are too busy or lazy to check up on.
To hear Cristina Kirchner speak, or Malvinero1 or others on these boards, you would imagine that:
There was a massive, long term indigenous population of Argentines leaving peacefully on the islands, when the nasty British turned up out of the blue, and forced them all to leave. That is the myth, that's what Kirchener is trying to sell to the world.
The truth, as now quite clearly we all understand it.
The islands were unoccupied by 1811 having previously housed French, Spanish and British civilian populations.
By 1828, Vernet set up his private enterprise of 30 or so civilians. You number 7 of his party as Argentines..ok, if you say so. I doubt it's important as Vernet was quite happy with either sovereignty.
The next Argentines arrived in November 1832. Their presence was challenged even before their arrival, but again, you give a number just shy of 60. Ok, if you say so. Again, if you want to be picky, not all f these were Argentine, although, unlike Vernet, I agree they represented the united Provinces.
8-10 weeks later they were expelled. Four of Vernets community left with them. You say these four were Argentine, I suggest they were from Uruguay, but not too important.
Please can you contact Cristina Fernandez and ask her to change the primary school curriculum to reflect this new concensus.
please can you as CFK to send another open letter to the Guardian to reflect this concensus.
please can you make sure that this new concensus is relayed to the next Unasor, Mercosur, Anussore, whatever shitte meeting.
The concensus is that the only Argentines ever evicted from the Falklands were a militia in 1833 that had been there less than 12 weeks, and a militia in 1982 that had been there a similar time.
As colonialism goes..it's not up there is it??
I wonder how many people would be left in Malvinas today if somebody kicked all Military & Ex-Military, Militia & Ex-Militia, Crown Servants & Ex Crown Servants together with all their dependents out of them Islands
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:06 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Wishful thinking. think?
@196 You're quite right, as one of the things they seem to gloss over completely is which territory these people came from? Saying these people were from United Provinces of the Río de la Plata doesn't mean they were Argentine, when Argentina didn't even exist. United Provinces of the Río de la Plata broke up into Uruguay, Bolivia, Parts of Chile, Brazil and the top part of Argentina. That doesn't in any way equate to Argentina, and the assumption that the people were 'Argentine' is just utter utter nonsense for the ignorant.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:29 pm - Link - Report abuse 0At least Think agrees with us now that his entire educational system is built upon the propagation of baseless lies and that no one other than a foreign occupying militia and their descendents were evicted.
Did we find out why the Argentines don't regard the black folks on the islands as real people? Is it something about their german roots?
No, wanting peace is part of their German roots. They want a peace of Chile, a peace of Uruguay, a peace of Brazil and all of the Falkland Islands.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:33 pm - Link - Report abuse 0If they truly thought the islands were theirs they would either
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:37 pm - Link - Report abuse 01, come and get them, regardless of any difficulties [we would]
2, take us to the ICJ.
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
They refuse on both accounts,
The islands will remain British until, they say otherwise ..
.
@199 .. and all of the antarctic. Which they keep flying pregnant women out to, just like Venezuela flies pregnant women out to the Isla des Aves. It's almost as though Venezuela has a stupid idea, and Argentina being their pet, has to be seen to do similar.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:40 pm - Link - Report abuse 0UK nuclear weapons and the illegal occcupation of Islas Malvinas Argentina are a threat to all of us in south America, I moved to Canada to live in security and not under occupation and threats by brits, if the Brits continue to occupy Islands Malvinas Argentina I will like to see a nuclear defence program 100% made in Argentina to prevent and end the illegal occupation of my country, we Latin Americans also have the right to self determination and live in freedom without the constant threat of UK since 1807.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:43 pm - Link - Report abuse 0http://axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/Article_64333.shtml
www.fihplc.com/index.php?section=0
http://axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/Article_64333.shtml
@202 You're a canadian joke. You cannot even take the hardship of living in a country that you abandoned because you're weak. You cannot take the poverty of living in Latin America and you cannot take the hypocrisy of it either.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:48 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Get over it, and make some sense next time.
Pirat- hunter
Jan 20th, 2013 - 07:54 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Please tell us, as we could use a laugh, exactly what you would do with your nucleus defence programme, 100% Argentina built.
How would you use it to prevent and end the illegal occupation of your country
What would you imagine the response might be...come on laddie, I could use a giggle.
PH is basically the equivalent of an Iraqi living in London after the first Gulf War, suggesting that the invasion of Kuwait was right and just, and demanding that the USA and their allies should sit down and negotiate the annexation of Kuwait to Iraq, without discussing it with the Kuwaitis.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 08:05 pm - Link - Report abuse 0The lack of morality in what they are asking is lost on these people.
So in summary, Think kicked an own-goal and just admitted that settlers weren't evicted, and in the process showed how his government lies.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 08:06 pm - Link - Report abuse 0And Pirat-Hunter moved to Canada (with the Queen of Canada as the head of state) to get away from living under British occupation.
And I thought CFK hiring a British jet was the funniest thing coming out of Argentina this month.
he said before, he was American , the argentina , the european , african , russian , korean,
Jan 20th, 2013 - 08:16 pm - Link - Report abuse 0he does not know who he is , where he is , why he is ,
we dont even know if he is human.
prove it. hombra .lol.
She must be on her way home by now. When she leaves the plane, I hope the cabin crew remember to thank her for flying British! Perhaps they could offer her frequent flyer miles.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 08:18 pm - Link - Report abuse 0She only flies the best,
Jan 20th, 2013 - 08:23 pm - Link - Report abuse 0and the british are the best.
still
she could always go by boat lol.
What I find interesting is that Think using his National Archives comes to almost the exact history of 1833 as the British do.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 08:32 pm - Link - Report abuse 0It is therefore fair to assume that it is the accurate version.
My view is that prior to 1811 is pretty irrelevant based on the fact that in those times, if you couldn't sustain a civilian population the land wasn't yours. France, Spain and Britain failed to do so. Forget plaques..etc no civilians, no claim.
In 1828, Vernet set up his business venture. Whether this constitutes a civilian population is debatable, whether they were Argentine is (according to both sides now, highly improbable), whether they were representatives of either Britain or the UP or both is highly debatable. But none of them were forced to leave..four chose to...we agree again.
In November 1832, 50 odd militia including their families arrived to claim sovereignty. They murdered their captain, raped his wife, and we all agree we forced to leave in January 1833.
So...the blatant act of 19th century colonialism was the removal of a 50-stong militia made up of mutineers, murderers and rapists, who were themselves trying to colonise and had only been there 10 weeks.
It's pretty weak isn't it?
And a whole country has been sold this shit, it's taught to primary schools, a president goes round the world spewing over other Heads of State.
Jesus its embarrassing....
1933 Lieutenant Colonel José María Pinedo, commander of the United Provinces schooner Sarandí, Pinedo entertained plans for resisting, but finally desisted because of his obvious numerical inferiority and the want of enough nationals among his crew (approximately 80% of his forces were British mercenaries).
Jan 20th, 2013 - 08:47 pm - Link - Report abuse 0So we even got rid of our own British pirates !!!
@210 At least Think is on our side now. He's finally understood that everything he's been taught has been a sack of nonsense. Were the murderers even technically Argentines or were they from the nebulous UPofRP (not argentina) again?
Jan 20th, 2013 - 08:54 pm - Link - Report abuse 0It's all nonsense.
So one bunch of ethnically European naval men predominantly British, removed another bunch (50 or so) of European naval (predominantly British) whod been there only 10 weeks from a group of islands 250miles from anywhere 180 years ago.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 09:13 pm - Link - Report abuse 0This act requires a full page advertisement from a Head of State and round the world jollies sucking off world leaders.
Crikey.
What a pathetic joke of leader CFK is.
Well Cher Think,
Jan 20th, 2013 - 09:20 pm - Link - Report abuse 0l think you've been well & truely knocked into a cocked hat.
The boys & girls on here have completely demolished your weak, lying arguments.
Even you, even you(repeated for emphasis!), must realise that you are wrong & have been proved to be wrong.
So, whats your silly country's next move?
Claim another country's land? Maybe you could try to take TDF from Chile?
Don't think so, Chile would kick your sorry arses right back to La Plata.
l must have been needling you, eh Cher Think?
Out with the insults when you can't win!
How very Argentine!
Btw Dahling, whats a dhaling? (snigger).
You're not an lnformation Office for anything..................except lying.
Got it now Think?
Them lslands are NOT yours.
British Antarctic Territory is NOT yours.
Just stay on the Pampas(which your country stole from dead people).
Hope this helps.
191 Think
Jan 20th, 2013 - 10:23 pm - Link - Report abuse 0What on earth is a 'crown servant'? Are you talking about nurses and teachers? And why would you want to expel them? In what way are they similar to an occupying military garrison?
And what have Chileans and St Helenians got to do with it? A lot of them are 'crown servants', in that they work for FIG. I guess that's what you mean. If you kicked out anyone who had ever in the course of their working life done any work for FIG, you probably wouldn't have anyone much left. And your point is......?
You aren't making any sense. You might even be starting to believe your own propaganda.
The military garrison in 1833 was kicked out because it shouldn't have been here. It had raised some horrid flag that wasn't the Union flag (what flag would it have been?), and was claiming what didn't belong to them. The people expelled were the ones, presumably, who didn't accept British rule, who would mainly have been the military. As it turned out, it took a little while longer to establish effective rule over the shocking bunch of violent criminals who were left (or Argentine heroes, if you prefer), but Britain did it in the end.
And we've been here ever since. Whether we are new arrivals, first generation, 15th generation, 'crown servants' or freewheeling entrepreneurs, is, frankly, none of your business. You don't have sovereignty, you don't set immigration policy, and you don't have a vote. Whatever the faults of our system, and there are many, we don't need you to point them out, and you don't have the power to put them right.
You need to toddle off and take care of that bloody great plank in your own eye and leave us to it.
@215 Ultimately these people are just very very sour sore losers. Had vernet have actually been working for the argies, their garrison have actually been any good, and the other garrison not murderers then it might have been a different history. Had they won the 1982 War of Aggression it might have been a different history.
Jan 20th, 2013 - 10:58 pm - Link - Report abuse 0But they didn't, they lost. They're sour losers.... dripping in 100% pure sourness.
Not everyone is happy about the vritish colony.
Jan 21st, 2013 - 01:16 am - Link - Report abuse 0i dont think this was just a photo shoot meeting With international terrorism on the rise, last time I checked the CIA, mossad and m16 are still operational.
www.fihplc.com/index.php?section=0
@217 ALEX VARGAS
Jan 21st, 2013 - 02:07 am - Link - Report abuse 0Not everyone is happy about the vritish colony.
i dont think this was just a photo shoot meeting With international terrorism on the rise, last time I checked the CIA, mossad and m16 are still operational.
www.fihplc.com/index.php?section=0
Funny!
You think spy agencies and secret plots are behind all of Argentina's woes.
The truth is, they probably don't think about Argentina and don't even know La Campora exists
LOL
196
Jan 21st, 2013 - 02:14 am - Link - Report abuse 0Argentina and the Malvinistas trawl around the world spreading a myth, a myth that most are too busy or lazy to check up on
ok then, read your own British history sites..
The British Empire
“Three years later, the British did formally leave the islands and they passed into the Spanish Empire for the next forty years. This arrangement was formally recognised by the British in the 1790 Nootka Sound Convention by which Britain formally rejected any colonial ambitions in 'South America and the islands adjacent'. It also reflected a weakening of British power in the Western Hemisphere coming shortly after the embarrassing loss of the 13 colonies partly thanks to French and Spanish intervention.
The Spanish claim on the islands would falter with the South American Wars for Independence at the start of the nineteenth century. The Spanish removed their formal representative and settlers from the island from 1810 and completed it by 1811. The islands were left to their own fate for the next decade as sealing and whaling ships might call in from time to time to take advantage of the harbour and fresh water. It was not to be until 1820 that the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata would send a frigate to the islands in order to assert their control as part of the legacy of post-colonial Spanish claims to authority there. Buenos Aires would appoint their first governor in 1823 who tried to limit the whole-scale slaughter of seals which were in danger of being made extinct on the islands. A penal colony was also established on the island”
Mark,
Jan 21st, 2013 - 02:45 am - Link - Report abuse 0Kind of you to quote from an unknown source.
You need to post the link to corroberate your posting.
I might add that if it is a hastily researched and written article in the media, it is hardly an accurate historical account or academically verified document of events.
John,
Jan 21st, 2013 - 05:44 am - Link - Report abuse 0As a former Vice Consul in South America you should know how to find it yourself..
@221
Jan 21st, 2013 - 07:50 am - Link - Report abuse 0Strangely enough, the only references to this text in google are the several occasions on which you have posted it yourself on mercopress without attribution. That's really credible.
Unfortunate also that this version of events is clearly contradicted by primary Argentine sources available on Argentine government websites, and indeed declaimed to the UN in June 2012 by CFKs' own delegation in the presence of CFK herself.
I think in this case at least, I might be willing to go with the official public statements of the Argentine government, namely delegation member
Marcelo Luis Vernet reading from the diary of his great-great-grandmother Mrs Luis Vernet to the C24 in June 2012 :
'Sunday, 30 August 1829 was a feast day for the village. Maria writes in her diary “Very good Saint Rose of Lima day, so Vernet has decided to take possession today of the islands in the name of the government of Buenos Aries”'.
So there we have it. The official representative of the BA government decides to claim possession for BA in August 1829.
Clearly if they are only claiming possession in 1829, they evidently didn't consider they had possession before that date. And therefore by their own admission they could not have held possession not in 1820, or 1823, as your magisterial unattributed anonymous source would have it.
But don't argue with me, take it up with Marcelo Luis Vernet, the Argentine Foreign Ministry, or the website of the Argentine ambassador to the UN.
http://www.embajadaabierta.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/vernet.pdf
Marcos
Jan 21st, 2013 - 07:58 am - Link - Report abuse 0Nobody is debating that the British left the islands, as did the Spanish. In 1811 there was no civilian population, only a plaque or two.
Therefore no civilian population, no sovereignty claim.
You can appoint a governor for Mars for all I care....no civilian population...no sovereignty.
Now we have agreed with Think that Vernets community was not Argentine, nor representatives of UP, and they were not expelled....no civilian population no sovereignty.
Now we have agreed with think that the militia were only there for 3 months, and not a civilian population...no civilian population..no sovereignty.
Subsequently, the islanders who live there today have supported an unbroken civilian population of 180 years...CIVILIAN POPULATION = SOVEREIGNTY.
Had, as the Malvinistas claimed...at any time a Spanish, French, UP or Argentine civilian population been forcibly removed from the islands, then Argentina would today have a wafer thin case (far thinner than the indigenous Patagonians though)....however as it never happened, there is no case to answer.
@223 I tried a similar search and it just gave me pages of Marcos' copypasta from mercopress.
Jan 21st, 2013 - 10:56 am - Link - Report abuse 0Does anyone else understand why these Argentines are unable to attribute their sources through clear citations? They cannot even seem to provide one, and yet it's taken as fact by themselves.
It's seriously worrying.
Think,Isolde,Marcos
Jan 21st, 2013 - 11:15 am - Link - Report abuse 0Isolde sorry to put you with the above but this is info only! Have all the names of the militia who were deported and families but a long list and will run out of type and time!
29 servicemen and 23 wives and children of then - total 52 servicemen and families deported. In reality the servicemen only were deported- the familes left NATURALLY with them! I have not doubt they could have stayed had they wanted to.
Alse shipped out was One Arg prisoner Maximo Vbarnes (warnes).
Also 2 foreigners - it is assumed than they had just arrived also on the Sarandi and were not actually part of the community- a Jose Viel and Francisco Ferreyra - it is assumed they left volunbtarily of their own accord.
Also left voluntarily of their own wish the settlers:
Joaquin Avuna and wife Marica and Joaquin Acuna and wife Juana - these were a Ur and a Brazilian couple - not Argentine it appears.
So - as UK has always stated - they deported the Militia - and their families went with them (and I guess their prisoner).
All others left voluntaril;y -6 - or stayed 22. Also another 5 civilians left on the Rapid who escorted the Sarandi - but they went to see Vernet and get more stores etc - and returned.
Anyway Think an I now seem to agree of what actually happened and at least the approx numbers.
Marco - you need to come up with clear evidence if you wish to dispute the above.
All the above info is in your Arg Historical records anyway.
So much for History - but they more important issue anyway is that 180 years on, the world(excepting one country perhaps) has moved on and today it is peoples who come first.
@255 argentines don't do objective history, nor do they do citations.
Jan 21st, 2013 - 02:16 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Tell these people to get the MBOA to stop her war chants and everything will be ok
Jan 21st, 2013 - 06:29 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Nice to see zopacas working for peace
Jan 22nd, 2013 - 10:17 pm - Link - Report abuse 0Nice painting this one, too
www.malvinense.com.ar/smalvi/11/1769.htm
www.elmalvinense.com.ar/smalvi/11/1769.htm
@225
Jan 23rd, 2013 - 07:21 am - Link - Report abuse 0Marco - you need to come up with clear evidence if you wish to dispute the above.
Hmm, Mark is running from this thread too, as well as his stupid racism that he showed on another thread.
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