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Britains’ Foreign Secretary David Cameron visits San Carlos Cemetery on the Falkland Islands on Monday. Photo: PA via AP

UK’s David Cameron visits Falklands in 30-year first, sparking ‘provocation’ claim

  • Britain’s top diplomat says he hopes the Falkland Islands will wish to stay in the UK family forever
  • Visit came amid renewed calls by Argentina for negotiations over the contested territory
Britain

UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron visited the Falkland Islands on Monday, prompting claims of “provocation” from an Argentine regional official on the first such trip in three decades to the far-flung UK territory claimed by the South American nation.

Cameron said he was visiting the South Atlantic archipelago at the centre of a 1982 war between the two nations to make clear the territory was “a valued part of the British family”.

Britain’s Press Association reported Cameron as saying Britain would “help protect and defend” the islands for as long as they want to be “part of the UK family”.

“And I hope that’s for a very, very long time, possibly forever,” he added.

David Cameron visits a museum in Goose Green on the Falkland Islands on Monday. Photo: PA via AP

Gustavo Melella, governor of Argentina’s Tierra del Fuego, Antarctica and Southern Atlantic Islands province, said on X that Cameron’s presence “constitutes a new British provocation that seeks to undermine our legitimate sovereign rights over our territories and to sustain colonialism in the 21st century”.

The Falklands, known as Islas Malvinas in Argentina, are about 480km (298 miles) from mainland Argentina, which claims to have inherited them from Spain when it gained independence.

Cameron to visit Falklands, says islands’ sovereignty ‘not up for discussion’

Britain insists it has historically ruled the Falklands and notes that islanders voted 99.8 per cent in favour of remaining British in a 2013 referendum.

A conflict over the territory in 1982 claimed the lives of 255 British and 649 Argentine soldiers and three islanders.

Argentina’s new president Javier Milei – who met Cameron last month in Davos – has said he hopes to recover the islands diplomatically.

But ahead of his visit, Cameron insisted sovereignty was non-negotiable while the Falklands residents wish to remain British.

“The Falkland Islands are a valued part of the British family,” he told the PA, which went with him to the archipelago 12,875km from Britain.

“And we are clear that as long as they want to remain part of the family, the issue of sovereignty will not be up for discussion,” Cameron said.

Milei has suggested London should approach the issue in a way similar to the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997.

Cameron was scheduled to tour battle sites on the islands before travelling to a G20 summit in Brazil.

The last UK cabinet minister to visit was defence secretary Michael Fallon in 2016, while Douglas Hurd was the last foreign secretary to head there, in 1994.

Additional reporting by Associated Press

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