Gibraltar and Falkland Islands flatly deny any “colonial situations” as was referred to by the foreign ministers of Spain and Argentina, and regret profoundly that two large countries with democratic credentials “seek to gang up to bully two very small territories and in the process completely ignore the right of their people to choose what they want to be”.
The joint release on Tuesday follows the Monday meeting in Buenos Aires of Spain's caretaker Jose Manuel García-Murillo and Susana Malcorra with the purpose of re-launching bilateral political, trade and investment relations between the two countries, which had been 'to sleep' for some time under previous Argentine governments.
The joint release reads as follows:
The Governments of Gibraltar and of the Falkland Islands take note of the meeting and joint press conference that took place in Buenos Aires yesterday between the Foreign Minister of Argentina Susana Malcorra and the Caretaker Foreign Minister of Spain Jose Manuel García-Margallo.
A call was made for an end to the “two colonial situations of the Falkland Islands and Gibraltar through bilateral negotiations with the United Kingdom, in order to give effect to the mandate of the United Nations.”
The two Foreign Ministers have displayed a remarkable lack of knowledge about the complexities and the differences between Gibraltar and the Falkland Islands. They have wrongly proceeded in order to target our countries as if the historical background and legal issues were one and the same when clearly they are not.
Moreover, Mr Margallo and Ms Malcorra need to understand that both Gibraltar and the Falkland Islands are on the list of Non-Self-Governing Territories held by the United Nations. The mandate of the United Nations, as reflected in the Charter and in the Covenants, is that the only way in which we can be removed from that list is through the freely and democratically expressed wishes of the people of Gibraltar and of the Falkland Islands respectively. The wishes of the people must be paramount.
It is a fundamental principle of international law that the right to self-determination comes first with regard to territories on the list and this has been the criteria that the United Nations has applied throughout the post-War history of decolonization. This cannot be changed overnight on the whim of the Foreign Ministers of Spain and Argentina.
It also does not say much for the democratic credentials of two large countries that they should seek to gang up in this way in order to bully two very small territories and in the process completely ignore the right of their people to choose what they want to be. Referenda held in both Gibraltar and in the Falkland Islands have made those wishes abundantly clear.
'The wishes of the people must be paramount”
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Disclaimer & comment rulesMr Margallo and Ms Malcorra need to understand that both Gibraltar and the Falkland Islands are on the list of Non-Self-Governing Territories held by the United Nations. The mandate of the United Nations, as reflected in the Charter and in the Covenants, is that the only way in which we can be removed from that list is through the freely and democratically expressed wishes of the people of Gibraltar and of the Falkland Islands respectively. The wishes of the people must be paramount.
Apr 05th, 2016 - 06:07 pm 0Exactly, and this is what the Governments of Spain and Argentina are afraid of, self determination. Because there is nothing they can say or do that would make the peoples of Gibraltar and the Falklands give away their freedom for slavery.
But Spain and Argentina will forever be disappointed countries because the UK will never abandon the people of Gibraltar and the Falklands.
The British government should withdraw from the C24 list
Apr 05th, 2016 - 07:34 pm 0and sod the UN.
Wait a cotton picking minute you Spanish hypocritical twits. How do you answer for your maintained colonial enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla?
Apr 05th, 2016 - 07:39 pm 0Dear Susana, it seems, is in dire need of a long overdue history lesson!
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