Argentina says Falkland Islanders ‘do not exist’
Argentina’s Foreign Minister Hector Timerman said on Wednesday that the Falkland Islanders “do not exist” after snubbing the chance of talks with their government members.

Argentina’s Foreign Minister Hector Timerman said on Wednesday that the Falkland Islanders “do not exist” after snubbing the chance of talks with their government members.
Timerman told a press conference in London that the 3,000-odd residents of the South Atlantic archipelago were simply British citizens who live there.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague met Jan Cheek and Dick Sawle, from the eight-member Falkland Islands legislative assembly, for talks at the Foreign Office in London, but Timerman declined an invitation to join them.
“The Falkland Islanders do not exist. What exists is British citizens who live in the Islas Malvinas,” Timerman said at the Argentinian ambassador’s residence, using the Spanish-language name for the windswept, barren isles.
The Falkland Islanders do not exist. What exists is British citizens who live in the Islas Malvinas
“The United Nations does not recognise a third party in the conflict. It says there are just two parts – the UK and Argentina.