UK Reasserts Falklands Are British After Argentina's 2-1 Win Sparks FIFA Scrutiny
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 16
UK Reasserts Falklands Are British After Argentina's 2-1 Win Sparks FIFA Scrutiny
3 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 16
Summary
Downing Street said the Falkland Islands “definitely are” British after Argentina players displayed a “Las Malvinas son Argentinas” banner following their 2-1 World Cup semi-final win over England in Atlanta.
The government said self-determination rests with islanders and its commitment “will never waver,” while backing calls for FIFA to investigate the post-match display.
1,513 of 1,517 votes in a 2013 Falklands referendum backed remaining a UK overseas territory, a result London cited as the basis for its unchanged position.
The dispute remains highly sensitive because Britain and Argentina fought a 74-day war over the islands in 1982 that killed 255 British personnel, three islanders and 649 Argentine soldiers.
UK politicians across parties condemned the banner, with some urging Argentina players be barred from the final against Spain.