Difference between revisions of "Falkland Islands" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image: Camp-Settlement.jpg|thumb|275px|Camp settlement]]
 
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The first sentence has been established as a compromise consensus between many editors in a long and difficult discussion (see talk page). Trying to either change the sentence to include less (e.g. "The '''Falkland Islands''' are an [[archipelago]]") or to include more (e.g. "The '''Falkland Islands''', ([[Spanish (language)|Spanish]]: ''Islas Malvinas'') are an archipelago") will be reverted on sight without discussion by many of the editors part of the discussion. If you have overriding NEW arguments, please bring them to the talk page first! Also note that the NPOV tag is in place because this text and its sentiments are in dispute
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The '''Falkland Islands''' ({{lang-es|Islas Malvinas}} are an [[archipelago]] in the [[South Atlantic Ocean]], located 300&nbsp;miles from the coast of [[Argentina]], 671&nbsp;miles west of the [[Shag Rocks (South Georgia)|Shag Rocks]] ([[South Georgia]]), and 584&nbsp;miles north of [[Antarctica]] ([[Elephant Island (South Shetland Islands)|Elephant Island]]). They consist of two main islands, [[East Falkland]] and [[West Falkland]], together with 776 smaller islands.
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The '''Falkland Islands''', also called the ''Malvinas''<ref name="names">
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[[Stanley, Falkland Islands|Stanley]], on East Falkland, is the [[capital city]]. The islands are a self-governing [[British overseas territories|Overseas Territory]] of the [[United Kingdom]], but have been the subject of a [[Sovereignty of the Falkland Islands|claim to sovereignty]] by Argentina since the [[1833 invasion of the Falkland Islands|British invasion of 1833]].
{{cite web
 
  | title =Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas)
 
  | work =The World Factbook
 
  | publisher =[[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]]
 
  | url =https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/fk.html
 
  | date=2007-02-08
 
  | accessdate =2007-02-21}}
 
<br/>
 
{{cite encyclopedia
 
  | title = ISO 3166-1
 
  | encyclopedia = Wikipedia
 
  | publisher =Wikimedia Foundation
 
  | url = http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=ISO_3166-1&oldid=105194928
 
  | quote = ISO 3166-1, as part of the ISO 3166 standard, provides codes for the names of countries and dependent areas.
 
  | date = 2007-02-02
 
  | accessdate = 2007-02-21 }}
 
<br/>
 
{{cite web
 
  | title =List of Territories
 
  | publisher =[[United Nations]]
 
  | url =http://www.un.org/Depts/Cartographic/english/geoname.pdf
 
  | format=pdf
 
  | accessdate =2007-02-21}}
 
</ref>, are an [[archipelago]] in the [[South Atlantic Ocean]], located 300 miles (483 kilometres) from the coast of [[Argentina]], 671 miles (1080&nbsp;km) west of the [[Shag Rocks (South Georgia)|Shag Rocks]] ([[South Georgia]]), and 584 miles (940&nbsp;km) north of [[Antarctica]] [[Elephant Island (South Shetland Islands)|(Elephant Island)]]. They consist of two main islands, [[East Falkland]] and [[West Falkland]], together with about 700 smaller islands. [[Stanley, Falkland Islands|Stanley]], on East Falkland, is the capital and largest city. The islands are a self-governing [[British overseas territories|Overseas Territory]] of the [[United Kingdom]], but have been the subject of a [[Sovereignty of the Falkland Islands|claim to sovereignty]] by Argentina since the [[1833 invasion of the Falkland Islands|British invasion of 1833]].
 
  
In pursuit of this claim in 1982 the islands were [[1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands|invaded by Argentina]], precipitating the two-month-long undeclared [[Falklands War]] between Argentina and the United Kingdom, which resulted in the defeat and withdrawal of Argentine forces. Since the war there has been strong economic growth in both fisheries and tourism. The inhabitants of the islands are [[British nationality law|British citizens]]. Many can trace their origins in the Islands back to early nineteenth century Scottish immigration. They reject the Argentine sovereignty claim<ref>
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In pursuit of this claim in 1982, the islands were [[1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands|invaded by Argentina]], precipitating the two-month-long undeclared [[Falklands War]] between Argentina and the United Kingdom, which resulted in the defeat and withdrawal of Argentine forces. Since the war there has been strong economic growth in both [[fishery|fisheries]] and tourism. The inhabitants of the islands are [[British nationality law|British citizens]] (since a [[British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Act 1983|1983 Act]]) and under Argentine Law are eligible for Argentine [[nationality law|citizenship]]. Many islanders trace their origins on the islands to early nineteenth-century [[Scotland|Scottish]] immigration, and reject the Argentine [[sovereignty]] claim.
{{cite web
 
  | title = Country Profile: Falkland Islands
 
  | work = Countries & Regions
 
  | publisher =[[Foreign and Commonwealth Office]]
 
  | url =http://www.fco.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1007029394365&a=KCountryProfile&aid=1018965238550
 
  | date = 2006-11-09
 
  | accessdate =2007-02-21}}
 
</ref>  with [[English language|English]] and not [[Spanish language|Spanish]] being the language used on the islands.
 
  
 
==Name==
 
==Name==
The islands are referred to in the [[English language]] as "[The] Falkland Islands". This name dates from an expedition led by John Strong in 1690, who named the islands after his patron, [[Anthony Cary, 5th Viscount Falkland]]. The [[Spanish language|Spanish]] name for the islands, ''"Islas Malvinas"'', is derived from the [[French language|French]] name ''"Îles Malouines"'', bestowed in 1764 by [[Louis Antoine de Bougainville]], after the mariners and fishermen from the [[Brittany|Breton]] port of [[Saint-Malo]] who became the island's first known human settlers.
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The islands are referred to in the [[English language]] as "[The] Falkland Islands." This name dates from an expedition led by John Strong in 1690, who named the islands after his patron, [[Anthony Cary, Fifth Viscount Falkland]]. The [[Spanish language|Spanish]] name for the islands, ''"Islas Malvinas,"'' is derived from the [[French language|French]] name ''"Îles Malouines,"'' bestowed in 1764 by [[Louis Antoine de Bougainville]], after the mariners and fishermen from the [[Brittany|Breton]] port of [[Saint-Malo]] who became the island's first known human settlers.
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The [[ISO 3166|ISO]] designation is "Falkland Islands (Malvinas)."
  
The Falkland Islanders, as well as many others, tend to consider as offensive the use of the name ''Malvinas'', as for them it has an association with Argentina's military invasion of the islands in 1982.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} Some English-language media sources use the [[ISO 3166|ISO]] designation of "Falkland Islands (Malvinas)"
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Due to the ongoing sovereignty dispute, the use of many Spanish names is considered offensive in the Falkland Islands, particularly those associated with the [[Falklands War|1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands]]. General Sir [[Jeremy Moore]] would not allow the use of Islas Malvinas in the surrender document, dismissing it as a [[propaganda]] term.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
The Falkland Islands have had a complex history since their discovery, with [[France]], [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Britain]], [[Spain]] and [[Argentina]] all claiming possession and establishing as well as abandoning settlements on the islands. The Spanish government's claim was continued by Argentina after the latter's independence in 1816 and the independence war in 1817, until 1833 when the United Kingdom took control of the islands by force, following the destruction of the Argentine settlement at [[Port Louis, Falkland Islands|Puerto Soledad]] by the American sloop [[USS Lexington (1825)|USS Lexington]] (December 28, 1831). Argentina has continued to claim sovereignty over the islands, and the dispute was used by the military [[Military dictatorship|junta]] dictatorship as a reason to invade and briefly occupy the islands before being defeated in the two-month-long undeclared [[Falklands War]] in 1982 by a United Kingdom task force which returned the islands to British control.
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The Falkland Islands have had a complex history since their discovery, with [[French colonial empires|France]], [[British Empire|Britain]], [[Spanish Empire|Spain]], and [[Argentina]] all claiming possession, and establishing as well as abandoning settlements on the islands. The [[Falklands Crisis (1770)|Falklands Crisis of 1770]] was nearly the cause of a war between France, Spain and Britain. The Spanish government's claim was continued by Argentina after the [[Argentine Declaration of Independence|latter's independence]] in 1816 and the [[Argentine War of Independence|independence war]] in 1817. The United Kingdom took control of the islands by force with the [[1833 invasion of the Falkland Islands]] following the destruction of the Argentine settlement at [[Port Louis, Falkland Islands|Puerto Luis]] by the [[United States|American]] sloop [[USS Lexington (1825)|USS ''Lexington'']] ([[28 December]] [[1831]]). Argentina has continued to claim sovereignty over the islands, and the dispute was used by the [[National Reorganization Process|military junta]] as a reason to invade and briefly occupy the islands before being defeated in the two-month-long [[Falklands War]] in 1982 by a United Kingdom task force which returned the islands to British control.
[[Image:Gypsy-Cove.jpg|thumb|275px|Penguins at Gypsy Cove]]
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The islands were uninhabited when they were first discovered by [[Age of Discovery|European explorers]]. There is disputed evidence of prior settlement by humans, based on:
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*The existence of the [[Falkland Island fox]], or Warrah (now extinct). It is thought that humans brought it to the islands, but it may have reached the islands via a [[land bridge]] when the [[sea level]] was much lower during the last [[ice age]].
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*A scattering of undated [[artefact]]s including [[arrowhead]]s and the remains of a [[canoe]].
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The first European explorer to sight the islands is widely thought to be [[Sebald de Weert]], a [[Dutch Empire|Dutch]] sailor, in 1600. Although several British and Spanish historians maintain their own explorers discovered the islands earlier, some older maps, particularly Dutch ones, used the name "Sebald Islands", after de Weert.
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In January 1690, [[Kingdom of England|English]] sailor John Strong, captain of the ''Welfare'', was heading for [[Puerto Deseado]] (in Argentina); but driven off course by contrary winds, he reached the Sebald Islands instead and landed at Bold Cove. He sailed between the two principal islands and called the passage "Falkland Channel" (now [[Falkland Sound]]), after Anthony Cary, 5th Viscount Falkland (1659&ndash;1694), who as Commissioner of the [[Admiralty]] had financed the expedition, later becoming First Lord of the Admiralty. From this body of water the island group later took its collective English name.
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[[Image:Upland.jpg|thumb|left|Upland.]] [[Image:Camp-Settlement.jpg|thumb|left|Camp settlement.]]  
  
The islands were uninhabited when they were first discovered by [[Europe]]an explorers. There is disputed evidence of prior settlement by humans, based on:-
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The first settlement on the Falkland Islands, called [[Port St. Louis]], was founded by the French navigator and military commander Louis Antoine de Bougainville in 1764 on Berkeley Sound, in present-day [[Port Louis, Falkland Islands|Port Louis]], [[East Falkland]].
*The existence of the [[Falkland Island fox]] or Warrah (now extinct), on the islands. It is thought that humans brought it to the islands, but it may have reached the islands by itself via a [[land bridge]] when sea level was much lower during the last [[ice age]].
 
*A scattering of undated [[artifact]]s including [[arrowhead]]s and the remains of a [[canoe]].
 
  
The first European explorer widely credited with sighting the islands is [[Sebald de Weert]], a [[Netherlands|Dutch]] sailor, in 1600. Although several [[England|English]] and Spanish historians maintain their own explorers discovered the islands earlier, some older maps, particularly Dutch ones, used the name "Sebald Islands", after de Weert. However, the islands appear on numerous Spanish and other maps beginning in the 1520s{{Fact|date=February 2007}}.
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Unaware of the French presence, in January 1765 British captain [[John Byron]] explored and claimed [[Saunders Island, Falkland Islands|Saunders Island]], at the western end of the group, where he named the harbour of [[Port Egmont]], and sailed near other islands, which he also claimed for [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George III]]. A British settlement was built at Port Egmont in 1766. Also in 1766, Spain acquired the French colony, and after assuming effective control in 1767, placed the islands under a governor subordinate to the [[Government of the Río de la Plata#Buenos Aires Province governors|Buenos Aires colonial administration]]. Spain attacked Port Egmont, ending the British presence there in 1770. The expulsion of the British settlement [[Falkland Crisis (1770)|brought the two countries to the brink of war]], but a peace treaty allowed the British to return in 1771 with neither side relinquishing sovereignty.<ref name="briefhistory2">[http://www.falklands.info/history/history2.html A brief history of the Falkland Islands Part 2 - Fort St. Louis and Port Egmont.], Accessed [[2007-09-08]]</ref>
  
In January 1690, English sailor [[John Strong]], captain of the ''Welfare'', was heading for [[Puerto Deseado]] (in Argentina), but driven off course by contrary winds, he reached the Sebald Islands instead and landed at Bold Cove. He sailed between the two principal islands and called the passage "Falkland Channel" (now [[Falkland Sound]]), after Anthony Cary, 5th Viscount Falkland (1659-1694), who as [[Commissioner]] of the [[Admiralty]] had financed the expedition and who later became First Lord of the Admiralty. From this body of water the island group later took its collective English name.  
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As a result of economic pressures resulting from the upcoming [[American Revolutionary War|American War of Independence]], the United Kingdom unilaterally chose to withdraw from many of her overseas settlements in 1774.<ref>[http://www.falklands.info/history/history2.html] A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE FALKLAND ISLANDS: Part 2 - Fort St. Louis and Port Egmont</ref><ref>[http://www.falklands.info/history/timeline.html] FALKLAND ISLANDS TIMELINE: A Chronology of events in the history of the Falkland Islands</ref> Upon her withdrawal in 1776 the UK left behind a [[commemorative plaque|plaque]] asserting her claims. From then on, Spain alone maintained a settlement ruled from [[Buenos Aires]] under the control of the [[Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata]] until 1811. On leaving in 1811, Spain, too, left behind a plaque asserting her claims.
  
The first settlement on the Falkland Islands, called Port Saint Louis, was founded by the [[France|French]] navigator and military commander Louis Antoine de Bougainville in 1764 on Berkeley Sound, in present-day [[Port Louis, Falkland Islands|Port Louis]], [[East Falkland]].   
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When Argentina declared its independence from Spain in 1816, it laid claim to the islands according to the ''[[uti possidetis]]'' principle, since they had been under the administrative jurisdiction of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata.
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On [[6 November]] [[1820]], Colonel [[David Jewett]], raised the flag of the [[United Provinces of the River Plate]] (Argentina) at Port Louis[[David Jewett|Jewett]] was an American sailor and [[privateer]] in the employment of businessman Patrick Lynch to captain his ship, the frigate [[Heroina|''Heroína'']].  (Lynch had obtained a corsair licence from the Buenos Aires Supreme Director Jose Rondeau.) [[David Jewett|Jewett]] had put into the islands the previous month, following a disastrous eight month voyage with most of his crew disabled by scurvy and diseaseAfter resting in the islands and repairing his ship he returned to Buenos Aires.
  
Unaware of the French presence, in January 1765, English captain [[John Byron]] explored and claimed [[Saunders Island]], at the western end of the group, where he named the harbour of [[Port Egmont]], and sailed near other islands, which he also claimed for King [[George III of Great Britain]]. A British settlement was built at Port Egmont in 1766. Also in 1766, Spain acquired the French colony, and after assuming effective control in 1767, placed the islands under a governor subordinate to [[Buenos Aires]]. Spain attacked Port Egmont, ending the British presence there in 1770, but Britain returned in 1771 and remained until 1774. Upon her withdrawal in 1774 Britain left behind a [[Commemorative plaque|plaque]] asserting her claims, and in 1790, Britain officially ceded control of the islands to Spain, and renounced any and all colonial ambitions in South America, and its adjacent islands, as part of the [[Nootka Convention]]. In addition, the Nootka Convention provided for equal British, Spanish, and US rights to fish the surrounding waters of, as well as land on and erect temporary buildings to aid in such fishing operations, in any territory south of parts already occupied by Spain - the Falkland Islands being one of them since 1770 [http://www.usgennet.org/usa/or/county/union1/1889vol1/1889volumeIpage120-133.htm].  From then on Spain ruled the islands unchallenged under the name "Islas Malvinas", maintaining a settlement ruled from Buenos Aires under the control of the [[Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata]] until 1811. On leaving in 1811, Spain, too, left behind a plaque asserting her claims.
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Occupation began in 1828 with the foundation of a settlement and a penal colony. The settlement was destroyed by United States warships in 1831 after the Argentinian governor of the islands Luis Vernet seized U.S. seal hunting ships during a dispute over fishing rights. They left behind escaped prisoners and pirates. In November 1832, Argentina sent another governor who was killed in a mutiny.
[[Image: Upland.jpg|thumb|275px|left|Upland]]
 
  
When Argentina declared its independence from Spain in 1816, it laid claim to the islands according to the ''[[uti possidetis juris]]'' principle, since they had been under the administrative jurisdiction of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata. On 6 November 1820, Colonel David [[Jewett]], an American sailor at  the service of Buenos Aires, and captain of the frigate ''Heroina'', raised the flag of the [[United Provinces of the River Plate]] (which later became Argentina) at Port Louis. He warned the British and American [[pinniped|seal]] hunting ships present that they did not have authorization to hunt seals in the area, and then returned to Buenos Aires; the sealers ignored his warning.
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In January 1833, British forces returned and informed the Argentine commander that they intended to assert British sovereignty. The existing settlers were allowed to remain, with an [[Ireland|Irish]] member of Vernet's settlement, William Dickson, appointed as the Islands' governor. Vernet's deputy, Matthew Brisbane, returned later that year and was informed that the British had no objections to the continuation of Vernet's business ventures provided there was no interference with British control.<ref>{{cite book|first=Laurio H.|last=Destéfani|title=The Malvinas, the South Georgias and the South Sandwich Islands, the conflict with Britain|location=Buenos Aires|date=1982}}</ref><ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Apcbg/Darwin-1834 Extracts from the Diary of Charles Darwin</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=EHBeagleDiary&viewtype=text&pageseq=304&keywords=falklands |title=Darwin's Beagle Diary (1831-1836)|pages=p.304|publisher=The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online|accessdate=2007-07-23}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cpel.uba.ar/filargenta/correo/malv0020.htm|title=Ocupación británica: Port Stanley (Puerto Argentino)|language=Spanish|accessdate=2007-07-23|publisher=}}</ref> 
  
Occupation began in 1826 with the foundation of a settlement and a penal colony. The settlement was destroyed by United States warship in 1831 after the Argentinian governor of the islands Luis Vernet seized U.S. seal hunting ships during a dispute over fishing rights. They left behind escaped prisoners and pirates. In November 1832, Argentina sent another governor who was killed in a mutiny. In January 1833, British forces returned, took control, repatriated the remainder of the Argentine settlement, and began to repopulate the islands with British citizens.
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[[Image:stan 001.jpg|right|thumb|Road sign to the [[Stanley, Falkland Islands|capital]].]]
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The [[Royal Navy]] built a base at [[Stanley, Falkland Islands|Stanley]], and the islands became a strategic point for navigation around [[Cape Horn]]. A [[World War I]] naval battle, the [[Battle of Falkland Islands]], took place in December 1914, with a British victory over the [[German Empire|Germans]]. During [[World War II]], Stanley served as a Royal Navy station and serviced ships which took part in the [[Battle of the River Plate]].
  
[[Image:stan_001.jpg|185px|right|thumb|Roadsign to the capital.]]
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Sovereignty over the islands became an issue again in the latter half of the 20th century. Argentina, which had never renounced its claim to the islands, saw the creation of the [[United Nations]] as an opportunity to present its case before the rest of the world. In 1945, upon signing the [[United Nations Charter|UN Charter]], Argentina stated that it reserved its right to sovereignty of the islands, as well as its right to recover them. The United Kingdom responded in turn by stating that, as an essential precondition for the fulfilment of UN Resolution 1514,<ref>[http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/RESOLUTION/GEN/NR0/152/88/IMG/NR015288.pdf?OpenElement]</ref> regarding the de-colonisation of all territories still under foreign occupation, the [[Falklanders]] first had to vote for the British withdrawal at a [[referendum]] to be held on the issue.
The [[Royal Navy]] built a base at [[Stanley, Falkland Islands|Stanley]], and the islands became a strategic point for navigation around [[Cape Horn]]. The [[World War I]] naval battle, the [[Battle of Falkland Islands]] took place in December 1914, with a British victory over the [[Germany|Germans]]. During [[World War II]], Stanley served as a Royal Navy station and serviced ships which took part in the [[Battle of the River Plate]].  
 
  
Sovereignty over the islands became an issue again in the latter half of the twentieth century. Argentina, which had never renounced its claim to the islands, saw the creation of the  [[United Nations]] as an opportunity to present its case before the rest of the world. In 1945, upon signing the [[United Nations Charter|UN Charter]], Argentina stated that it reserved its right to sovereignty of the islands, as well as its right to recover them. The United Kingdom responded in turn by stating that, as an essential precondition for the fulfilment of [[Decolonization#UN resolution 1514|UN Resolution 1514]], regarding the de-colonization of all territories still under foreign occupation, the Falklanders first had to vote for the British withdrawal at a referendum to be held on the issue.
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[[Image:Aerial photo Port Stanley.jpg|thumb|[[Stanley, Falkland Islands|Stanley]].]]
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Talks between British and Argentine foreign missions took place in the 1960s, but failed to come to any meaningful conclusion. A major sticking point in all the negotiations was that the two thousand inhabitants of mainly British descent preferred that the islands remain British territory.
  
[[Image:Aerial photo Port Stanley.jpg|thumb|275px|[[Stanley, Falkland Islands|Stanley]]]]
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===Argentine links===
Talks between British and Argentine foreign missions took place in the 1960s, but failed to come to any meaningful conclusion. A major sticking point in all the negotiations was that the two thousand inhabitants of mainly British descent preferred that the islands remain British territory.  
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There were no air links to the islands until 1971, when the [[Argentine Air Force]] (FAA), which operates the state airline [[LADE]], began [[amphibious aircraft|amphibious flights]] between [[Comodoro Rivadavia]] and Stanley using [[HU-16 Albatross|Grumman HU-16 Albatross]] aircraft.<ref>[http://web.sion.com/s.alaimo/malvinas.html Commemorative Stamps of first flights]</ref>
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Following a FAA request, the UK and Argentina reached an agreement for the FAA to construct the first runway. Flights began using [[Fokker F27]] and continued with [[Fokker F28]] aircraft twice a week until 1982. This was the only air link to the islands.
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[[Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales|YPF]], the Argentine national oil and gas company, now part of [[Repsol YPF]], supplied the islands' energy needs.
  
 
===Falklands War===
 
===Falklands War===
 
{{main|Falklands War}}
 
{{main|Falklands War}}
On April 2, 1982, Argentina [[1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands|invaded the Falkland Islands]] and other British territories in the South Atlantic ([[South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands]]), encouraged in part by the United Kingdom's reduction in military capacity in the South Atlantic and as a diversion from poor economic performance at home. The invasion was condemned by the United Nations Security Council, although world reaction ranged from support in the [[Latin America]]n countries (with the exception of [[Chile]]), to opposition in Europe, the Commonwealth, and eventually the United States. The British sent a large expeditionary force to retake the islands leading to the [[Falklands War]]. After a short but fierce naval and air war, the British landed at San Carlos Water on May 21 and a land war followed until the Argentine forces surrendered on June 14.
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On [[2 April]] [[1982]], Argentina [[1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands|invaded the Falkland Islands]] and other British territories in the South Atlantic ([[South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands]]). The [[National Reorganization Process|military junta]] which had ruled Argentina since 1976 sought to maintain power by diverting public attention from the nation's [[Economy of Argentina#Post-World War II|poor economic performance]]. They attempted to do this by playing off long-standing feelings of the Argentines towards the islands.<ref>{{PDFlink|[http://www.me.gov.ar/curriform/publica/sirlin_conv_dictadura.pdf Argentine Government]|185&nbsp;[[Kibibyte|KiB]]<!-- application/pdf, 189962 bytes —>}}</ref> British writers hold that the United Kingdom's reduction in military capacity in the South Atlantic also encouraged the invasion.<ref>{{cite web | title = Guide to the conflict | work = Fight for the Falklands &mdash; 20 years on | publisher =[[BBC News]] | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/static/in_depth/uk/2002/falklands/guide2.stm | quote = The Foreign Secretary, [[Peter Carington, 6th Baron Carrington|Lord Carrington]], and two junior ministers had resigned by the end of the week <nowiki>[following the Argentinian invasion]</nowiki>. They took the blame for Britain's poor preparations and plans to decommission [[HMS Endurance (1967)|HMS ''Endurance'']], the Navy's only Antarctic patrol vessel. It was a move which may have lead the Junta to believe the UK had little interest in keeping the Falklands. | accessdate =2007-03-18}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title =Secret Falklands fleet revealed | work =[[BBC News]] | quote =[[David Owen|Lord Owen]], who was foreign secretary in 1977, said that if [[Margaret Thatcher]]'s Conservative government had taken similar action to that of five years earlier, the war would not have happened. | publisher =[[bbc.co.uk]] | date =[[2005-06-01]] | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4597581.stm | accessdate =2007-03-18}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | last =Casciani | first =Dominic | title =1976 Falklands invasion warning | work =[[BBC News]] | quote =The [[Oliver Franks, Baron Franks|Franks]] Report into the eventual war noted that as tension mounted during 1977, the government covertly sent a small naval force to the islands &mdash; but did not repeat the move when relations worsened again in 1981-2. This has led some critics to blame prime minister Margaret Thatcher for the war, saying the decision to plan the withdrawal of the only naval vessel in the area sent the wrong signal to the military junta in Buenos Aires. | publisher =[[bbc.co.uk]] | date =[[2006-12-29]] | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/6213121.stm | accessdate =}}</ref>
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The [[United Nations Security Council]] issued [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 502|Resolution 502]], calling on Argentina to withdraw forces from the Islands and to both parties to seek a diplomatic solution.<ref> [http://www.historycentral.com/HistoricalDocuments/UNReso502.html HistoryCentral. United Nations Resolution 502, ''Adopted by the Security Council at its 2350th meeting held on 3 April 1982.'']</ref> International reaction ranged from support in the [[Latin America]]n countries (with the exception of [[Chile]]), to opposition in Europe (with the exception of [[Spain]]), the [[Commonwealth]], and eventually the United States. The British sent an [[expeditionary force]] to retake the islands, leading to the [[Falklands War]]. After short but fierce naval and air battles, the British landed at San Carlos Water on [[21 May]], and a land campaign followed until the Argentine forces surrendered on [[14 June]].
  
Following the war, the British increased their military presence on the islands, constructing [[RAF Mount Pleasant]] and increasing the military garrison. Falkland Islanders were also granted full British citizenship. Although the UK and Argentina since resumed diplomatic relations in 1989, no further negotiations on sovereignty have taken place.
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Following the war, the British increased their military presence on the islands, constructing [[RAF Mount Pleasant]] and increasing the military garrison. Although the United Kingdom and Argentina resumed diplomatic relations in 1989, no further negotiations on sovereignty have taken place.
  
 
==Politics==
 
==Politics==
{{morepolitics|country=the Falkland Islands}}<!--Please add new information to relevant articles of the series—>
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{{main|Politics of the Falkland Islands|Sovereignty of the Falkland Islands}}
{{seealso|Sovereignty of the Falkland Islands}}
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Executive authority is vested in the Queen and is exercised by the [[Governor of the Falkland Islands|Governor]] on her behalf. The Governor is also responsible for the administration of [[South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands]], as these islands have no native inhabitants. Defence and Foreign Affairs are the responsibility of the United Kingdom. The current Governor is [[Alan Huckle]], appointed July 2006.
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[[Image:Falkland Islands Coronation Stamp.jpg|right|thumb|A Falkland stamp showing the British Royal Family]]
  
Under the [[constitution]], the latest version of which came into force in 1985, there is an [[Executive Council]] and a [[Legislative Council]]. The Executive Council, which advises the Governor, is also chaired by the Governor. It consists of the Chief Executive, Financial Secretary and three Legislative Councillors, who are elected by the other Legislative Councillors. The Legislative Council consists of the Chief Executive, Financial Secretary and the eight Legislative Councillors, of whom five are elected from Stanley and three from [[Camp (Falkland Islands)|Camp]], for four year terms. It is presided over by the Speaker, currently Darwin Lewis Clifton.  
+
[[Executive (government)|Executive authority]] is vested in the [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen]] and is exercised by the [[Governor of the Falkland Islands|Governor]] on her behalf. The Governor is also responsible for the administration of [[South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands]], as these islands have no native inhabitants. Defence and Foreign Affairs are the responsibility of the United Kingdom. The current Governor is [[Alan Huckle]], appointed July 2006.
  
The loss of the war against Britain over control of the islands led to the collapse of the Argentine [[military dictatorship]] in 1983. Disputes over control of the islands continue. In 2001, British Prime Minister [[Tony Blair]] became the first to visit Argentina since the war. On the twenty-second anniversary of the war, Argentina's President [[Néstor Kirchner]] gave a speech insisting that the islands would once again be part of Argentina. Kirchner, campaigning for president in 2003, regarded the islands a top priority. In June 2003 the issue was brought before a United Nations committee, and attempts have been made to open talks with Britain to resolve the issue of the islands. As far as the Falkland Islands Government and people are concerned there is no issue to resolve. The Falkland Islanders themselves are almost entirely British and maintain their allegiance to the United Kingdom.
+
Under the [[constitution]], the latest version of which came into force in 1985, there is an [[Executive Council]] and a [[Legislative Council]]. The Executive Council, which advises the Governor, is also chaired by the Governor. It consists of the Chief Executive, Financial Secretary and three Legislative Councillors, who are elected by the other Legislative Councillors. The Legislative Council consists of the Chief Executive, Financial Secretary and the eight Legislative Councillors, of whom five are elected from Stanley and three from [[Camp (Falkland Islands)|Camp]], for four-year terms. It is presided over by the Speaker, currently Darwin Lewis Clifton.
  
Falkland Islanders were granted full British citizenship from 1 January 1983 under the [[British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Act 1983]].
+
The loss of the war against the United Kingdom over control of the islands led to the collapse of the Argentine [[National Reorganization Process|military dictatorship]] in 1983. Disputes over control of the islands continue. In 1992 Argentina and Britain resumed diplomatic relations and reopened their embassies in each other's countries. In 1998, in retaliation to former Chilean president Augusto [[Pinochet]]'s arrest in London, the [[Chilean]] government banned flights between [[Punta Arenas]] and [[Port Stanley]], thus isolating the islands from the rest of the world. [[Uruguay]] and [[Brazil]] refused to authorise direct flights between their territories and Port Stanley, forcing the Islands' government to enter negotiations with the Argentine government which led to Argentina authorising direct flights between its territory and Stanley, on condition that Argentine citizens be allowed on the islands.<ref>[http://falklands.info/history/99comm.html] AGREEMENT OF 14th JULY 1999</ref> In 2001, British Prime Minister [[Tony Blair]] became the first Prime Minister to visit Argentina since the war. On the twenty-second anniversary of the war, Argentina's President [[Néstor Kirchner]] gave a speech insisting that the islands would once again be part of Argentina. Kirchner, [[Argentine general election, 2003|campaigning for president]] in 2003, regarded the islands as a top priority. In June 2003 the issue was brought before a United Nations committee, and attempts have been made to open talks with the United Kingdom to resolve the issue of the islands. As far as the Falkland Islands Government and people are concerned, there is no issue to resolve. The Falkland Islanders themselves are almost entirely British and maintain their allegiance to the United Kingdom.<ref>[http://www.falklands.gov.fk/overview.php Falkland Islands Government Overview.]</ref>
 +
 
 +
On [[2 April]] [[2007]] (exactly 25 years after the Argentine invasion), Argentina renewed its claim over the Falkland Islands, asking for the UK to resume talks on sovereignty.
 +
 
 +
Falkland Islanders were granted full British citizenship from [[1 January]] [[1983]] under the [[British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Act 1983]].
 +
 
 +
[[22 September]] [[2007]], [[The Guardian]] reported the UK government was preparing to stake new claims on the sea floor around the Falklands and other UK remote island possessions, in order to exploit natural resources that may be present.<ref name="Guardian">
 +
{{cite news |first=Owen |last=Bowcott |title=The new British empire? UK plans to annex south Atlantic |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/argentina/story/0,,2174616,00.html |publisher=The Guardian |date=2007-09-22 |accessdate=2007-09-23}}</ref>  In October 2007, a British spokeswoman confirmed that Britain intended to submit a claim<ref name="Reuters_Antartica">
 +
{{cite news |first=Kate|last=Kelland|title=Britain to claim a million square km of Antarctica |url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUKL1721422020071017 |publisher=Reuters |date=2007-10-18 |accessdate=2007-10-20}}</ref> to the UN to extend seabed territory around the Falklands and South Georgia, in advance of the expiry of the deadline<ref name="Prof_Dodds">{{cite news |first=Prof Klaus|last=Dodds|title=Icy imperialism or reinforcement of the Antarctic treaty? |url=http://politics.guardian.co.uk/foreignaffairs/story/0,,2194803,00.html |publisher=The Guardian|date=2007-10-19 |accessdate=2007-10-20}}</ref> for territorial claims following Britain's ratification of the [[United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea|1982 Law of the Sea Convention]].<ref name="Law_of_The_Sea">[http://www.globelaw.com/LawSea/lsconts.htm] Table of Contents to the UN Law of the Sea Convention</ref>.  If the claim is disputed, the UN will suspend the claim until the dispute is settled.<ref name="Reuters_Antartica"/>  The claim is largely theoretical and does not affect the [[Antarctic Treaty System|Antarctic treaty]] or confirm new rights upon Britain.  Neither does it permit the exploitation of oil or gas reserves, since these are banned by a protocol to the treaty.  It would enable Britain to police fishing within the zone to prevent over exploitation of natural resources by commercial fishing in line with Britain's obligations under the treaty.<ref name="Prof_Boyle">{{cite news |first=Prof Alan|last=Boyle|title=Icy imperialism or reinforcement of the Antarctic treaty? |url=http://politics.guardian.co.uk/foreignaffairs/story/0,,2194803,00.html |publisher=The Guardian|date=2007-10-19 |access date=2007-10-20}}</ref>  Nevertheless many commentators have criticised the move for going against the ''spirit'' of the [[Antarctic Treaty System|Antarctic treaty]].<ref name ="Prof_Dodds"/>  Argentina has indicated it will challenge any British claim to Antarctic territory and the area around the Falkland Islands and [[South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands|South Georgia]].<ref name="Argentine_protests">{{cite news |first=Owen |last=Boycott |title=Argentina ready to challenge Britain's Antarctic claims |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2007/oct/19/climatechange.fossilfuels |publisher=The Guardian |date=2007-10-19 |accessdate=2007-10-20}}</ref>
  
 
==Geography==
 
==Geography==
Line 218: Line 205:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 +
*Anderson, Duncan. ''The Falklands War 1982'', Osprey Publishing, 2002. ISBN 978-1841764221
 +
*Hastings, Max, & Jenkins, Simon. ''The Battle for the Falklands'', Trans-Atlantic Publications, 1997. ISBN 978-0330352840
 +
*Schafer, Kevin. ''The Falkland Islands: Between the Wind & Sea'', Coach House Publication, 2003. ISBN 978-1899392261
 +
*Wagstaff, William. ''Falkland Islands: The Bradt Travel Guide'', Bradt Travel Guides, 2001. ISBN 978-1841620374
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
Line 223: Line 214:
 
* [http://www.falklands.gov.fk/ Falkland Islands Government] official site
 
* [http://www.falklands.gov.fk/ Falkland Islands Government] official site
 
* [http://www.falklandislands.com/ Falkland Islands Tourism] official site
 
* [http://www.falklandislands.com/ Falkland Islands Tourism] official site
* [http://www.fidc.org.fk/ Falkland Islands Development Corporation] official site
 
 
* [http://www.falklandnews.com/ Falkland Islands News Network] official site
 
* [http://www.falklandnews.com/ Falkland Islands News Network] official site
 
* [http://www.falklands.info/ Falkland Islands Information Portal]
 
* [http://www.falklands.info/ Falkland Islands Information Portal]
* {{dmoz|Regional/South_America/Falkland_Islands/}}
+
 
* [http://www.jim-mclaren.co.uk/ Falkland Islands Photos Collection]
 
* [http://www.falklands.info/background/visitorsguide.html A Visitor's View of the Falkland Islands]
 
* [http://www.ukota.org/ United Kingdom Overseas Territories Association]
 
* [http://www.samueljohnson.com/falklands.html  Thoughts on the Late Transactions Respecting Falkland's Islands by Samuel Johnson 1771]
 
* [http://www.britlink.org/falkland.htm The Falkland Islands & Falklands Links at Britlink]
 
* [http://www.MuseoMalvinas.com.ar  Fundación Museo Nacional Malvinas]
 
* [http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article2162858.ece Tourist plans for the island]
 
* {{wikitravel}}
 
  
 
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Revision as of 17:57, 23 November 2007

Falkland Islands
Flag of Falkland Islands Coat of arms of Falkland Islands
Flag Coat of arms
Motto: "Desire the right"
Anthem: God Save the Queen
Location of Falkland Islands
Capital
(and largest city)
Stanley
51°42′S 57°51′W
Official languages English
Government UK overseas territory
 - Head of state Queen Elizabeth II
 - Governor Alan Huckle
 - Chief Executive Chris Simpkins
UK overseas territory  
 - Liberation Day 14 June 1982 
Area
 - Total 12,173 km² (162nd)
4,700 sq mi 
 - Water (%) 0
Population
 - July 2005 estimate 3,060
 - Density 0.25/km²
0.65/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2005 estimate
 - Total $75 million
 - Per capita $25,000 (2002 estimate)
HDI  (n/a) n/a (n/a)
Currency Falkland pound1 (FKP)
Internet TLD .fk
Calling code +500
1Fixed to the Pound Sterling (GBP).
Camp settlement

The Falkland Islands (Spanish: Islas Malvinas are an archipelago in the South Atlantic Ocean, located 300 miles from the coast of Argentina, 671 miles west of the Shag Rocks (South Georgia), and 584 miles north of Antarctica (Elephant Island). They consist of two main islands, East Falkland and West Falkland, together with 776 smaller islands.

Stanley, on East Falkland, is the capital city. The islands are a self-governing Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom, but have been the subject of a claim to sovereignty by Argentina since the British invasion of 1833.

In pursuit of this claim in 1982, the islands were invaded by Argentina, precipitating the two-month-long undeclared Falklands War between Argentina and the United Kingdom, which resulted in the defeat and withdrawal of Argentine forces. Since the war there has been strong economic growth in both fisheries and tourism. The inhabitants of the islands are British citizens (since a 1983 Act) and under Argentine Law are eligible for Argentine citizenship. Many islanders trace their origins on the islands to early nineteenth-century Scottish immigration, and reject the Argentine sovereignty claim.

Name

The islands are referred to in the English language as "[The] Falkland Islands." This name dates from an expedition led by John Strong in 1690, who named the islands after his patron, Anthony Cary, Fifth Viscount Falkland. The Spanish name for the islands, "Islas Malvinas," is derived from the French name "Îles Malouines," bestowed in 1764 by Louis Antoine de Bougainville, after the mariners and fishermen from the Breton port of Saint-Malo who became the island's first known human settlers.

The ISO designation is "Falkland Islands (Malvinas)."

Due to the ongoing sovereignty dispute, the use of many Spanish names is considered offensive in the Falkland Islands, particularly those associated with the 1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands. General Sir Jeremy Moore would not allow the use of Islas Malvinas in the surrender document, dismissing it as a propaganda term.

History

The Falkland Islands have had a complex history since their discovery, with France, Britain, Spain, and Argentina all claiming possession, and establishing as well as abandoning settlements on the islands. The Falklands Crisis of 1770 was nearly the cause of a war between France, Spain and Britain. The Spanish government's claim was continued by Argentina after the latter's independence in 1816 and the independence war in 1817. The United Kingdom took control of the islands by force with the 1833 invasion of the Falkland Islands following the destruction of the Argentine settlement at Puerto Luis by the American sloop USS Lexington (28 December 1831). Argentina has continued to claim sovereignty over the islands, and the dispute was used by the military junta as a reason to invade and briefly occupy the islands before being defeated in the two-month-long Falklands War in 1982 by a United Kingdom task force which returned the islands to British control.

The islands were uninhabited when they were first discovered by European explorers. There is disputed evidence of prior settlement by humans, based on:

  • The existence of the Falkland Island fox, or Warrah (now extinct). It is thought that humans brought it to the islands, but it may have reached the islands via a land bridge when the sea level was much lower during the last ice age.
  • A scattering of undated artefacts including arrowheads and the remains of a canoe.

The first European explorer to sight the islands is widely thought to be Sebald de Weert, a Dutch sailor, in 1600. Although several British and Spanish historians maintain their own explorers discovered the islands earlier, some older maps, particularly Dutch ones, used the name "Sebald Islands", after de Weert.

In January 1690, English sailor John Strong, captain of the Welfare, was heading for Puerto Deseado (in Argentina); but driven off course by contrary winds, he reached the Sebald Islands instead and landed at Bold Cove. He sailed between the two principal islands and called the passage "Falkland Channel" (now Falkland Sound), after Anthony Cary, 5th Viscount Falkland (1659–1694), who as Commissioner of the Admiralty had financed the expedition, later becoming First Lord of the Admiralty. From this body of water the island group later took its collective English name.

Upland.
Camp settlement.

The first settlement on the Falkland Islands, called Port St. Louis, was founded by the French navigator and military commander Louis Antoine de Bougainville in 1764 on Berkeley Sound, in present-day Port Louis, East Falkland.

Unaware of the French presence, in January 1765 British captain John Byron explored and claimed Saunders Island, at the western end of the group, where he named the harbour of Port Egmont, and sailed near other islands, which he also claimed for King George III. A British settlement was built at Port Egmont in 1766. Also in 1766, Spain acquired the French colony, and after assuming effective control in 1767, placed the islands under a governor subordinate to the Buenos Aires colonial administration. Spain attacked Port Egmont, ending the British presence there in 1770. The expulsion of the British settlement brought the two countries to the brink of war, but a peace treaty allowed the British to return in 1771 with neither side relinquishing sovereignty.[1]

As a result of economic pressures resulting from the upcoming American War of Independence, the United Kingdom unilaterally chose to withdraw from many of her overseas settlements in 1774.[2][3] Upon her withdrawal in 1776 the UK left behind a plaque asserting her claims. From then on, Spain alone maintained a settlement ruled from Buenos Aires under the control of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata until 1811. On leaving in 1811, Spain, too, left behind a plaque asserting her claims.

When Argentina declared its independence from Spain in 1816, it laid claim to the islands according to the uti possidetis principle, since they had been under the administrative jurisdiction of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata. On 6 November 1820, Colonel David Jewett, raised the flag of the United Provinces of the River Plate (Argentina) at Port Louis. Jewett was an American sailor and privateer in the employment of businessman Patrick Lynch to captain his ship, the frigate Heroína. (Lynch had obtained a corsair licence from the Buenos Aires Supreme Director Jose Rondeau.) Jewett had put into the islands the previous month, following a disastrous eight month voyage with most of his crew disabled by scurvy and disease. After resting in the islands and repairing his ship he returned to Buenos Aires.

Occupation began in 1828 with the foundation of a settlement and a penal colony. The settlement was destroyed by United States warships in 1831 after the Argentinian governor of the islands Luis Vernet seized U.S. seal hunting ships during a dispute over fishing rights. They left behind escaped prisoners and pirates. In November 1832, Argentina sent another governor who was killed in a mutiny.

In January 1833, British forces returned and informed the Argentine commander that they intended to assert British sovereignty. The existing settlers were allowed to remain, with an Irish member of Vernet's settlement, William Dickson, appointed as the Islands' governor. Vernet's deputy, Matthew Brisbane, returned later that year and was informed that the British had no objections to the continuation of Vernet's business ventures provided there was no interference with British control.[4][5][6][7]

File:Stan 001.jpg
Road sign to the capital.

The Royal Navy built a base at Stanley, and the islands became a strategic point for navigation around Cape Horn. A World War I naval battle, the Battle of Falkland Islands, took place in December 1914, with a British victory over the Germans. During World War II, Stanley served as a Royal Navy station and serviced ships which took part in the Battle of the River Plate.

Sovereignty over the islands became an issue again in the latter half of the 20th century. Argentina, which had never renounced its claim to the islands, saw the creation of the United Nations as an opportunity to present its case before the rest of the world. In 1945, upon signing the UN Charter, Argentina stated that it reserved its right to sovereignty of the islands, as well as its right to recover them. The United Kingdom responded in turn by stating that, as an essential precondition for the fulfilment of UN Resolution 1514,[8] regarding the de-colonisation of all territories still under foreign occupation, the Falklanders first had to vote for the British withdrawal at a referendum to be held on the issue.

Stanley.

Talks between British and Argentine foreign missions took place in the 1960s, but failed to come to any meaningful conclusion. A major sticking point in all the negotiations was that the two thousand inhabitants of mainly British descent preferred that the islands remain British territory.

Argentine links

There were no air links to the islands until 1971, when the Argentine Air Force (FAA), which operates the state airline LADE, began amphibious flights between Comodoro Rivadavia and Stanley using Grumman HU-16 Albatross aircraft.[9]

Following a FAA request, the UK and Argentina reached an agreement for the FAA to construct the first runway. Flights began using Fokker F27 and continued with Fokker F28 aircraft twice a week until 1982. This was the only air link to the islands.

YPF, the Argentine national oil and gas company, now part of Repsol YPF, supplied the islands' energy needs.

Falklands War

Main article: Falklands War

On 2 April 1982, Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands and other British territories in the South Atlantic (South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands). The military junta which had ruled Argentina since 1976 sought to maintain power by diverting public attention from the nation's poor economic performance. They attempted to do this by playing off long-standing feelings of the Argentines towards the islands.[10] British writers hold that the United Kingdom's reduction in military capacity in the South Atlantic also encouraged the invasion.[11][12][13]

The United Nations Security Council issued Resolution 502, calling on Argentina to withdraw forces from the Islands and to both parties to seek a diplomatic solution.[14] International reaction ranged from support in the Latin American countries (with the exception of Chile), to opposition in Europe (with the exception of Spain), the Commonwealth, and eventually the United States. The British sent an expeditionary force to retake the islands, leading to the Falklands War. After short but fierce naval and air battles, the British landed at San Carlos Water on 21 May, and a land campaign followed until the Argentine forces surrendered on 14 June.

Following the war, the British increased their military presence on the islands, constructing RAF Mount Pleasant and increasing the military garrison. Although the United Kingdom and Argentina resumed diplomatic relations in 1989, no further negotiations on sovereignty have taken place.

Politics

File:Falkland Islands Coronation Stamp.jpg
A Falkland stamp showing the British Royal Family

Executive authority is vested in the Queen and is exercised by the Governor on her behalf. The Governor is also responsible for the administration of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, as these islands have no native inhabitants. Defence and Foreign Affairs are the responsibility of the United Kingdom. The current Governor is Alan Huckle, appointed July 2006.

Under the constitution, the latest version of which came into force in 1985, there is an Executive Council and a Legislative Council. The Executive Council, which advises the Governor, is also chaired by the Governor. It consists of the Chief Executive, Financial Secretary and three Legislative Councillors, who are elected by the other Legislative Councillors. The Legislative Council consists of the Chief Executive, Financial Secretary and the eight Legislative Councillors, of whom five are elected from Stanley and three from Camp, for four-year terms. It is presided over by the Speaker, currently Darwin Lewis Clifton.

The loss of the war against the United Kingdom over control of the islands led to the collapse of the Argentine military dictatorship in 1983. Disputes over control of the islands continue. In 1992 Argentina and Britain resumed diplomatic relations and reopened their embassies in each other's countries. In 1998, in retaliation to former Chilean president Augusto Pinochet's arrest in London, the Chilean government banned flights between Punta Arenas and Port Stanley, thus isolating the islands from the rest of the world. Uruguay and Brazil refused to authorise direct flights between their territories and Port Stanley, forcing the Islands' government to enter negotiations with the Argentine government which led to Argentina authorising direct flights between its territory and Stanley, on condition that Argentine citizens be allowed on the islands.[15] In 2001, British Prime Minister Tony Blair became the first Prime Minister to visit Argentina since the war. On the twenty-second anniversary of the war, Argentina's President Néstor Kirchner gave a speech insisting that the islands would once again be part of Argentina. Kirchner, campaigning for president in 2003, regarded the islands as a top priority. In June 2003 the issue was brought before a United Nations committee, and attempts have been made to open talks with the United Kingdom to resolve the issue of the islands. As far as the Falkland Islands Government and people are concerned, there is no issue to resolve. The Falkland Islanders themselves are almost entirely British and maintain their allegiance to the United Kingdom.[16]

On 2 April 2007 (exactly 25 years after the Argentine invasion), Argentina renewed its claim over the Falkland Islands, asking for the UK to resume talks on sovereignty.

Falkland Islanders were granted full British citizenship from 1 January 1983 under the British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Act 1983.

22 September 2007, The Guardian reported the UK government was preparing to stake new claims on the sea floor around the Falklands and other UK remote island possessions, in order to exploit natural resources that may be present.[17] In October 2007, a British spokeswoman confirmed that Britain intended to submit a claim[18] to the UN to extend seabed territory around the Falklands and South Georgia, in advance of the expiry of the deadline[19] for territorial claims following Britain's ratification of the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention.[20]. If the claim is disputed, the UN will suspend the claim until the dispute is settled.[18] The claim is largely theoretical and does not affect the Antarctic treaty or confirm new rights upon Britain. Neither does it permit the exploitation of oil or gas reserves, since these are banned by a protocol to the treaty. It would enable Britain to police fishing within the zone to prevent over exploitation of natural resources by commercial fishing in line with Britain's obligations under the treaty.[21] Nevertheless many commentators have criticised the move for going against the spirit of the Antarctic treaty.[19] Argentina has indicated it will challenge any British claim to Antarctic territory and the area around the Falkland Islands and South Georgia.[22]

Geography

Map of the Falkland Islands

The Falkland Islands comprise two main islands, East Falkland and West Falkland (in spanish Isla Gran Malvina and Isla Soledad respectevely) and about 700 small islands. The total land area is 4,700 square miles (12,173 km²), approximately the same area as Connecticut or Northern Ireland, and a coastline estimated at 800 miles (1,288 km).

Much of the land is part of the two main islands separated by the Falkland Sound: East Falkland, home to the capital of Stanley and the majority of the population, and West Falkland. Both islands have mountain ranges, rising to 2,313 feet (705 m) at Mount Usborne on East Falkland. There are also some boggy plains, most notably Lafonia, the southern half of East Falkland. Virtually the entire area of the islands is used as pasture for sheep.

Smaller islands surround the main two. They include Barren Island, Beaver Island, Bleaker Island, Carcass Island, George Island, Keppel Island, Lively Island, New Island, Pebble Island, Saunders Island, Sealion Island, Speedwell Island, Staats Island, Weddell Island, West Point Island. The Jason Islands lie to the north west of the main archipelago, and Beauchene Island some distance to its south. Speedwell Island and George Island are split from East Falkland by Engle Passage.

The islands claim a territorial sea of 12 nautical miles (22 km) and an exclusive fishing zone of 200 nautical miles (370 km), which has been a source of disagreement with Argentina.

The Falkland Islands have a cold marine climate with strong westerly winds. It is generally cloudy and humid; rain occurs on more than half the days in a typical year. Snow is rare, but can occur at almost any time of year. Islanders themselves talk about two main areas of the islands, namely Stanley and the rest, which they call "the Camp", from the Spanish campo ("countryside").

Economy

Sheep farming was formerly the main source of income for the islands, and still plays an important part with high quality wool exports going to the UK, but efforts to diversify introduced in 1984 have made fishing the largest part of the economy and brought increasing income from tourism.

The government sale of fishing licences to foreign countries has brought in more than £40 million a year in revenues, and local fishing boats are also in operation. More than 75% of the fish taken are squid, and most exports are to Spain. Tourism has shown rapid growth, with more than 30,000 visitors in 2001. The islands have become a regular port of call for the growing market of cruise ships. Attractions include the scenery and wildlife conservation with penguins, seabirds, seals and sealions, and visits to battlefields, golf, fishing and wreck diving.

An agreement with Argentina has set the terms for exploitation of offshore resources including large oil reserves, but climatic conditions of the southern seas mean that exploitation will be difficult task, though economically viable, and the continuing sovereignty dispute with Argentina is hampering progress. Defence is provided by the UK and British military expenditure makes a significant contribution to the economy. The islands are self sufficient except for defence, exports account for more than £125 million a year.

The largest company in the islands used to be the Falkland Islands Company (FIC), a publicly quoted company on the London Stock Exchange and was responsible for the majority of the economic activity on the islands, though its farms were sold in 1991 to the Falkland Islands Government. The FIC now operates several retail outlets in Stanley and is involved in port services and shipping operation.

The currency in use is the Falkland Pound, which remains in parity with Pounds Sterling—sterling, both notes and coins, circulate interchangeably with the local currency. The Falkland Islands also mint their own coins, and issue stamps which forms a source of revenue from overseas collectors.

Demographics

File:IMG 0688-ch-whalebone-arch.jpg
Christ Church Cathedral with whale bone arch, Stanley.

The population is 2,967 (July 2003 estimate), the majority of which are of British descent (approximately 70%). The native-born inhabitants call themselves "Islanders". Outsiders often call Islanders "Kelpers", from the kelp which grows profusely around the islands, but the name is no longer used in the Islands. Those people from the United Kingdom who have obtained Falkland Island status, became what are known locally as 'belongers', or to mean the islands belonged to Great Britain. The great majority of islanders are of Scottish and Ulster Scots descent[citation needed]. However, a few Islanders are of French, Portuguese and Scandinavian descent. Some are the descendants of whalers who reached the Islands during the last two centuries. Furthermore there is a small minority of South American, mainly Chilean origin, and in more recent times many people from Saint Helena have also come to work in the Islands. The Falkland Islands have been a centre of English language learning for South Americans.

The main religion is Christianity. The main denominations are Church of England, Roman Catholicism, United Free Church, Evangelist Church, Jehovah's Witnesses, Lutheranism, and Seventh-day Adventism. The extra-provincial Anglican parish of the Falkland Islands is under the direct jurisdiction of the Archbishop of Canterbury. The Falklands Islands form an Apostolic Prefecture of the Catholic Church. There is a small Greek Orthodox church in the Islands due to the presence of Greek fishermen.

Medical Care

The Falkland Islands Government Health and Social Services Department provides medical care for the islands. The King Edward VII Memorial Hospital (KEMH) is Stanley's only hospital. It was partially military operated in the past but is now under complete civilian control. [23] There are no ophthalmologists or opticians on the islands, although an optician from the UK visits about every 6 months and an ophthalmologist comes to do cataract surgery and eye exams on irregular intervals (once every few years). There are 2 dentists on the islands.

Broadcasting and telecommunications

Broadcasting
  • PAL television, using the UK VHF and UHF allocations is standard.
  • FM stereo broadcasting using the UK allocation is standard.
  • MW broadcasting using 10 kHz steps (standard in ITU Zone I).
Telephony
  • Fiber optic communications: not yet present.
  • Telephony, mostly by microwave relay.
  • Telephony, via shortwave (SSB mode) is used for outlying settlements.

Transport

File:IMG 0686-dash-7.jpg
The Dash-7 of the British Antarctic Survey at Stanley.

The Falkland Islands has two airports with paved runways. RAF Mount Pleasant, thirty miles west of Stanley, acts as the main international airport, with flights operated by the Royal Air Force to RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire, England via a refueling stop at RAF Ascension Island. RAF flights are on Tri-Stars although it is common for charter aircraft to be used if the Tri-Stars are required for operational flights. At present (December 2006) the RAF air link is operated by Air Atlanta Icelandic, using 747s. Flights are also available to Chile operated by LAN. Port Stanley Airport is a smaller airport outside the city, and is used for internal flights. Most settlements have grass air strips which are served by Islander aircraft of the Falkland Islands Government Air Service (FIGAS). The internal flight schedule is decided a day in advance according to passenger needs and an announcement made on the radio detailing arrival and departure times the night before. The British International (BRINTEL) company also operate two Sikorsky S61N helicopters for passenger flights between the islands. The British Antarctic Survey operates a transcontinental air link between the Falkland Islands and the Rothera base airfield servicing also other British bases in the British Antarctic Territory using a de Havilland Canada Dash 7.

The road network has been improved in recent years. However, not too many paved roads exist outside Stanley and the RAF base.

Mines and ordnance

Approximately twenty five thousand land mines remain from the 1982 war which are securely and clearly fenced off. Free maps are available from the EOD (Explosive Ordnance Disposal) office in Stanley. Care should still be taken as some beaches were mined and there have been concerns the tides could have moved some mines. The same applies where mine fields are close to rivers. Care should be taken in case mines have been washed out of the marked area by flooding. There is also ordnance left over from the war, although finds of this type are becoming rarer with the passage of time.


Notes

  1. A brief history of the Falkland Islands Part 2 - Fort St. Louis and Port Egmont., Accessed 2007-09-08
  2. [1] A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE FALKLAND ISLANDS: Part 2 - Fort St. Louis and Port Egmont
  3. [2] FALKLAND ISLANDS TIMELINE: A Chronology of events in the history of the Falkland Islands
  4. Destéfani, Laurio H. (1982). The Malvinas, the South Georgias and the South Sandwich Islands, the conflict with Britain. 
  5. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Apcbg/Darwin-1834 Extracts from the Diary of Charles Darwin
  6. Darwin's Beagle Diary (1831-1836) pp. p.304. The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online. Retrieved 2007-07-23.
  7. Ocupación británica: Port Stanley (Puerto Argentino) (in Spanish). Retrieved 2007-07-23.
  8. [3]
  9. Commemorative Stamps of first flights
  10. Noia 64 mimetypes pdf.pngPDF
  11. Guide to the conflict. Fight for the Falklands — 20 years on. BBC News. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
  12. "Secret Falklands fleet revealed", BBC News, bbc.co.uk, 2005-06-01. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
  13. Casciani, Dominic, "1976 Falklands invasion warning", BBC News, bbc.co.uk, 2006-12-29.
  14. HistoryCentral. United Nations Resolution 502, Adopted by the Security Council at its 2350th meeting held on 3 April 1982.
  15. [4] AGREEMENT OF 14th JULY 1999
  16. Falkland Islands Government Overview.
  17. Bowcott, Owen, "The new British empire? UK plans to annex south Atlantic", The Guardian, 2007-09-22. Retrieved 2007-09-23.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Kelland, Kate, "Britain to claim a million square km of Antarctica", Reuters, 2007-10-18. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Dodds, Prof Klaus, "Icy imperialism or reinforcement of the Antarctic treaty?", The Guardian, 2007-10-19. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
  20. [5] Table of Contents to the UN Law of the Sea Convention
  21. Boyle, Prof Alan, "Icy imperialism or reinforcement of the Antarctic treaty?", The Guardian, 2007-10-19.
  22. Boycott, Owen, "Argentina ready to challenge Britain's Antarctic claims", The Guardian, 2007-10-19. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
  23. http://www.falklands.gov.fk/4b.htm

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Anderson, Duncan. The Falklands War 1982, Osprey Publishing, 2002. ISBN 978-1841764221
  • Hastings, Max, & Jenkins, Simon. The Battle for the Falklands, Trans-Atlantic Publications, 1997. ISBN 978-0330352840
  • Schafer, Kevin. The Falkland Islands: Between the Wind & Sea, Coach House Publication, 2003. ISBN 978-1899392261
  • Wagstaff, William. Falkland Islands: The Bradt Travel Guide, Bradt Travel Guides, 2001. ISBN 978-1841620374

External links


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