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Argentina's Fernandez asks Pope to intervene over Falklands

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez shows a gift as she stands next to newly elected Pope Francis during a private meeting at the Vatican March 18, 2013. REUTERS/Osservatore Romano

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez shows a gift as she stands next to newly elected Pope Francis during a private meeting at the Vatican March 18, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Osservatore Romano

ROME | Mon Mar 18, 2013 12:31pm EDT

ROME (Reuters) - Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez has asked Pope Francis to intervene in support of Buenos Aires in a dispute with Britain over the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic, she said on Monday.

Fernandez had lunch with the former Buenos Aires Archbishop Jorge Bergoglio in the Vatican shortly after arriving in Rome to attend his inaugural papal mass on Tuesday.

"I asked for his intervention on the question of the Malvinas," she told reporters afterwards, using the Argentinian name for the islands.

"I asked for his intervention to avoid problems that could emerge from the militarization of Great Britain in the south Atlantic," she said.

"We want a dialogue and that's why we asked the pope to intervene so that the dialogue is successful."

Fernandez who has led Argentina for six years, has mounted an increasingly vocal campaign to renegotiate the sovereignty of the archipelago, which Britain has resisted, causing a series of diplomatic rows.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said last week that Pope Francis, the first Latin American pontiff, had been wrong to say in 2012 that Britain had "usurped" the disputed islands from Argentina. The year before Bergoglio said that the islands were "ours", a view which most Argentinians share.

Cameron said the people of the islands had made their view clear in a referendum last week in which they overwhelmingly voted in favor of remaining British.

Argentina is 300 miles to the west of the islands, which it has claimed for almost 200 years. In 1982 Argentina invaded but was repelled after a 74-day war with Britain.

The left-leaning Fernandez, and her late husband and predecessor as president Nestor Kirchner, have had a frosty relationship with Bergoglio, who they have accused of taking sides with the opposition against them.

Some analysts say that Bergoglio's surprise election as pope last week at a conclave where he was not even mentioned on media lists of the favorites, had wrong-footed Fernandez, who would now want to patch up ties with the Roman Catholic Church before mid-term elections in October.

Bergoglio's election caused mass emotional rejoicing in Argentina.

Fernandez wore a black suit and brimmed hat with a matching bow for the meeting with Francis, at which they exchanged gifts.

"There was a very difficult situation in 1978 when Argentina and Chile were almost at war and then John Paul II intervened and helped bring the two countries closer," she told reporters.

"Now the situation is different because Britain and Argentina are two democratic countries with governments elected by the people. The only thing we ask is that we can sit down and negotiate."

(Reporting by Gavin Jones; writing by Barry Moody; editing by James Mackenzie)

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Comments (4)
exasperated wrote:
The Pope and the catholic church should stay out of politics. Their mission is suppose to be teaching about God and nothing else. All they do is muck up the whole works.

Mar 18, 2013 12:49pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
FatherJames wrote:
…So the left leaning head of Argentina has decided to make use of the Catholic Church after all? Since almost the entire population of the Falklands voted not to be handed over to Argentina, her pretentions of “democracy” ring hollow.

…Argentina could have had the Falklands by reasonable negotiations in 1980. The UK wanted out… but needed a “figleaf” of dignity about it. The Argentine dictatorship in power at the time (which had made thousands of its own people vanish into “night and fog…”) presented humiliating terms… the UK rejected them and the dictatorship launched an invasion. When the first British national was killed during that invasion, negotiating was out.

…If the Argentinian government really has any hopes, it needs to get the issue out of the press. No UK government could survive handing over in current circumstances. A dozen years from now if this were handled quietly, one might see both Argentinian and British flags at the airport in the Falklands. Unfortunately, Argentinian politicians use this issue to get votes… just as the dictatorship tried to stay in power by an invasion.

Mar 18, 2013 1:16pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Maea wrote:
Hahaha this is too ironic.

The Pope accused Kirchner’s regime of being a “demagoguery, totalitarianism, corruption and efforts to secure unlimited power”.

Kirchner looks like an idiot begging him for help.

“Britain and Argentina are two democratic”. Usually demographic countries don’t simply elect the dead Presidents wife.

“a view which most Argentinians share.”

I’d be careful with such broad assumptions…

Mar 18, 2013 1:28pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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