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Falkland Islands flag flies on Victory Green in Stanley Emma Hallett/PA Archive

Falkland Islands voting in referendum on British status

The result is not in doubt but the scale of the ‘yes’ vote will be closely watched as a sign of the Falklanders’ strength of feeling about remaining British.

FALKLAND ISLANDERS ARE holding a referendum today and tomorrow to send a message to the world that they want to stay British in defiance of claims to the territory by Argentina.

Buenos Aires has however already dismissed the vote as meaningless, saying it will not affect its dispute with Britain over the South Atlantic islands which sparked a brief but bloody war in 1982.

In a move instigated by residents themselves, 1,672 eligible voters are being asked whether they want the Falklands to remain an internally self-governing British overseas territory.

Homes and shops across the archipelago are festooned with posters urging people to vote “yes” as well as the British Union Jack and the deep blue Falklands flag, which has the Union Jack in one corner and a crest with a sheep in the middle.

People drive their vehicles bearing British flags and stickers in favor of keeping the Falkland Islands as an overseas territory (Paul Byrne/AP).

Result

The result, due overnight tomorrow, is not in doubt but the scale of the ‘yes’ vote will be closely watched as a sign of the Falklanders’ strength of feeling.

“People realise the importance of a high turnout because that is what is important,” Barry Elsby, a member of the island’s legislative assembly, told Sky News.

“It is showing the world that the majority of the people here want to remain as we are. We don’t want to become a colony of Argentina.”

The referendum is a logistical challenge across an inhospitable territory of 12,000 square kilometres and organisers are sending out mobile ballot boxes by plane and by Land Rover to ensure everyone will have a chance to vote.

Four-fifths of the 2,563 residents live in the capital Stanley, with its pubs and red telephone boxes, but several hundred are scattered in sheep farms and settlements across the rugged area beyond, known collectively as “Camp”.

Britain has held the barren islands since 1833 but Buenos Aires claims what it calls “Las Malvinas” are occupied Argentinian territory.

Diplomatic tensions have risen in recent years, fuelled by the discovery of oil near the Falklands, with Argentine President Cristina Kirchner ramping up her demands for the island’s return.

“Utterly meaningless”

The ambassador to Britain, Alicia Castro, this weekend branded the referendum “utterly meaningless” from the perspective of international law.

“Its predictable outcome neither ends the dispute nor affects Argentina’s unquestionable rights,” she told Infobae news from London.

But Falklanders hope the referendum result will arm them with an unambiguous message to take to other capitals when pressing their case for acceptance on the international stage.

The United States, for example, has studiously avoided taking sides on the issue despite its close ties with Britain.

Across the islands, posters emulating a British military recruitment campaign from World War I urge residents to vote, while a vehicle rally was planned on Sunday afternoon through Stanley.

At least 30 Land Rovers were also lined up on Saturday to spell “YES” on a patch of land opposite Stanley that has historically been used by Royal Navy vessels to commemorate their vessels.

“I’m quite proud to be a British overseas territory,” sheep farmer Ailsa Heathman told Britain’s ITV news.

The Penguin News, the local newspaper named after the flightless birds that are native to the Falklands, urged residents to show their support for the vote to the visiting media.

“When you pass journalists open your window, smile, wave or give the thumbs up,” it wrote. “Face painting, especially with children, is encouraged. Please bring your flags.”

“A British attempt to manipulate”

Argentina, 400 kilometres away, has branded the referendum “illegal” because, it claims, the islanders are “implanted” and thus do not have the right to self-determination.

The Argentinian foreign ministry said on Friday that the vote was “a British attempt to manipulate” the status of the archipelago.

London says it will not discuss sovereignty issues with Buenos Aires unless the islanders expressly wish it.

A YouGov opinion poll for Sky News published yesterday found that 24 percent of Argentinians surveyed said the Falklands was the most important foreign policy issue, against just one percent of Britons.

But a ComRes poll for ITV news showed that 77 percent of Britons thought the Falklanders should decide their future, and 60 percent believed London should keep military options open against any threat to the islands.

On April 2, 1982, Argentina’s then-ruling junta invaded the Falklands, sparking a 74-day war with Britain which cost the lives of 649 Argentine and 255 British troops.

If the invasion hardened the minds of the staunchly pro-British islanders, Kirchner’s tub-thumping has done likewise for a whole new generation.

“The only people who can really decide what is in their best interests are the Falkland Islanders,” Dick Sawle, another of the islands’ eight elected legislative assembly members, told AFP.

Diplomatic friction between Argentina and Britain has intensified since 2010, when London authorised oil prospecting in the waters around the islands.

But Falkland Islanders suspect Kirchner’s often-emotional crusade is a ruse to divert domestic attention away from Argentina’s mounting economic problems.

Several international observers, many of them from Latin America, are monitoring the polls, which are open between 1pm and 9pm today and tomorrow.

- © AFP 2013.

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    Mute Dave
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:07 PM

    The Falklands are not Northern Ireland. There was no Argentinian population before British settlers arrived. The two cannot be compared.

    140
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    Mute Ian McGougan
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:28 PM

    Give the Malvinas back to Argentina. Their sham election means nothing. The empire is finished

    113
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    Mute Z
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:29 PM

    They never took it from them…

    123
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    Mute Robert Nielsen
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:35 PM

    Do the wishes of the inhabitants not matter?

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    Mute Begrudgy
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:50 PM

    Learn some history Ian. Being Anti -British does not come into it here.

    101
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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:06 PM

    Hilarious to hear Argentina saying the islanders have no rights because they’re ‘implanted’.
    95% of the Argentine population are implanted ffs!

    95
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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:09 PM

    Also pretty ironic the Argentine ambassador citing international law – she should swot up on the Aruna Southern Treaty!

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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:12 PM

    *Arana

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    Mute Cathy Portka
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    Mar 10th 2013, 4:57 PM

    Argentina can’t manage their own country. Was it them that had their ship reposesed? Correct me if I’m wrong.

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    Mute Jason Culligan
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    Mar 10th 2013, 5:57 PM

    No Cathy you’re spot on there. It’s just a repeat of the war. Then and now Argentina were struggling economically and they only ever use their claim on the Falklands to distract their people from local issues.

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    Mute Ian McGougan
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    Mar 11th 2013, 6:49 AM

    i know history. and im British myself.

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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 11th 2013, 8:54 AM

    @Ian
    Your initial comment indicates that you don’t know your Falklands history.

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    Mute Robert Nielsen
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:34 PM

    At the end of the day the people have the right to decide. If they wish to remain part of Britain then they should be allowed. If they wish to join Argentina they should be allowed. All people have the right to self-determination and if they vote to stay within Britain then Argentina must respect their wishes whatever about geography.

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    Mute Michael Fagan
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:57 PM

    @robert Nielsen, you don’t seem to grasp the the notion of colonization, you can’t just move a few thousand of your citizens on to the land of another country, and then claim the country as yours because a majority voted in favor of it.

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    Mute Robert Nielsen
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:59 PM

    And you don’t seem to understand democracy. Do you propose that the inhabitants of the Falklands be expelled and the island to become part of Argentina? Or should they be forced to live under a government they reject?

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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:21 PM

    @Michael
    “land of another country”…

    Not sure how that can be possible when Britain settled them before Argentina even existed, but don’t let that get in the way of your opinion…

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    Mute Vinnie Bonar
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    Mar 11th 2013, 8:08 AM

    @michael, stupid comment.

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    Mute Andy Duggan
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:32 PM

    It’s a British territory. They colonized it before modern Argentina existed. And why would what the people of the Island want be meaningless? They clearly only want it for its oil.

    New Caledonia is a similar situation. However Australia aren’t demanding it back so why should Argentina be allowed to?

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    Mute Mark Moloney
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    Mar 10th 2013, 3:49 PM

    No, New Caledonia is not “similar situation” because that island has an indegenous native population who were treated as second class citizens by the French colonists. Thankfully they will hold a referendum within the next 5 years on independence.

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    Mute Declan Noonan
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:04 PM

    The irony of people saying that the Falklands should be given back to Argentina when Argentina came about because of Spanish colonialism in South America.
    The people of the Falklands have been there as long as the people of Argentina have been in South America or close enough.

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    Mute Con Ó Domhnaill
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:37 PM

    I am disappointed with The Journal using “Falkland Islands” in your heading. Those islands are illegally occupied by Britain, but the least you could do is refer to them as Islas Malvinas/Falkland Islands.

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    Mute Jason Naughton
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:57 PM

    This is not an Phoblacht Con. We call them what we will. And we use Northern Ireland freely too not the North of Ireland.

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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:03 PM

    How are they illegally occupied?
    Learn some history!

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    Mute John Murray
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    Mar 10th 2013, 9:29 PM

    I don’t speak Spanish, so Falkland Island British Overseas Territory, it is then.

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    Mute Vinnie Bonar
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    Mar 11th 2013, 8:13 AM

    @Jason, Don’t make it a Northern Ireland thing. An uninhabited unpopulated and unclaimed island being colonised is not the same as the Ulster plantations.

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    Mute Vinnie Bonar
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    Mar 11th 2013, 8:13 AM

    Con* sorry. Got names mixed up!

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    Mute Brendan Palmer
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:00 PM

    Population 2,500. Number killed in the 1982 war 900?? Self determination my arse, it’s the oil.

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    Mute Jason Culligan
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    Mar 10th 2013, 5:54 PM

    They didn’t know about the oil back then, or at least how much oil there is. The war was caused by the economic troubles going on in Argentina which threatened to cause the overthrow of the military junta. They felt that they could invade the islands and take them without a fight and use it as a propaganda victory. They didn’t expect the British to take an invasion of land they claim lightly.

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    Mute Brendan Palmer
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    Mar 10th 2013, 11:00 PM

    The first half of my post was some facts from 1982
    The second part relates the current argument

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    Mute Dylan Prendergast
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    Mar 10th 2013, 4:00 PM

    Argentina should just be mature and take their beating. The people of the island feel British and perhaps are even more British than British people. The vote is democratic and very fair and Argentina should respect the final obvious result. Let it go. We all know the Argentine economy is so poor that they want the islands for natural resources.

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    Mute Cían McAlone
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    Mar 10th 2013, 3:21 PM

    Argentina don’t understand that it’s people that makes a country, not land.

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    Mute Derek Durkin
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:15 PM

    If i was a Falklander i would pay a lot of interest in what is happening in the Chagos islands before i put my trust in the British government.

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    Mute АЛЕКСАНДРЪ ХАИШ
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    Mar 10th 2013, 5:13 PM

    I wonder when will we, in Ireland, will be voting in referendum on British status here????? It’s about the bloody time!

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    Mute Emily Elephant
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    Mar 10th 2013, 6:59 PM

    Erm … Good Friday Agreement?

    19
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    Mute Stephen McMahon
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:15 PM

    Getting the residents to vote is pointless. Exactly the same as gettingvthe residents of Gibraltar to vote. There would be no peace process up north if the wishes of an implanted population were given full weight

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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:29 PM

    95% of the Argentine population are descended from people who were ‘implanted’ as you put it.
    Maybe they should also return to Spain and elsewhere?

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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:30 PM

    Perhaps the seals and penguins should be given a vote?

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    Mute Luke
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:40 PM

    And the Sheep!!

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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 2:49 PM

    No Luke, the sheep were all implanted – the seals and penguins are the only native population ;-)

    53
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    Mute Paul
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    Mar 10th 2013, 5:44 PM

    British planters on Argentinian soil voting for themselves.

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    Mute Reg
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    Mar 10th 2013, 11:09 PM

    How is it Argentinian soil exactly? The islands are about 500 Km from Argentina.

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    Mute mattoid
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    Mar 10th 2013, 11:16 PM

    Why do you think its Argentinian soil? Genuine question.

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    Mute Derrick Knowles
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    Mar 10th 2013, 4:46 PM

    To be honest I think the UK should pull out, they’re a colony of a different era and geographically belong to Argentina.

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    Mute Jimmy
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    Mar 10th 2013, 5:22 PM

    It’s not a colony, its an overseas territory and has been for the past 180 years odd. The inhabitants will decide their own future.

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    Mute n49martin
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    Mar 10th 2013, 6:41 PM

    Magpie Thatcher should be made the patron saint of the F/lands

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    Mute Reg
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    Mar 10th 2013, 8:37 PM

    The Falklands are 500 Km from Argentina. Does that mean we should be part of France?

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    Mute Vincent Sweeney
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    Mar 10th 2013, 1:31 PM

    Two bald men and a comb

    9
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    Mute Barry O'Connor
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    Mar 10th 2013, 4:14 PM

    Its all about the oil, simple as!

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    Mute John O'rourke
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    Mar 10th 2013, 9:56 PM

    ********************** RESULTS JUST IN ***********************

    99% VOTE YES

    …AND THERE IS A 1% MARGIN OF ERROR :-)

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    Mute Conor Talbot
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    Mar 12th 2013, 8:50 AM

    Argentina should just ask 2,000 Argentine’s to move there ,then they’d win the vote

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    Mute Declan Noonan
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    Mar 12th 2013, 12:15 AM

    Are there any Argentinians living on the falkland islands? I can’t imagine there’s many. So guess what? It’s British then.

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