Betrayal fear as PM holds secret Falklands talks

GORDON Brown will this week spark fears that the Falkland Islands could be handed back to Argentina by holding secret discussions about the future of the territory.

No surrender Gordon Brown is told No surrender, Gordon Brown is told

The Prime Minister is to have private one-to-one talks with Argentine president Cristina Kirchner – an implacable opponent of British rule over the South Atlantic archipelago – during a tour of South America.

Diplomatic sources say sovereignty is on their agenda.

Last night, veterans warned that any move to surrender the islands to Argentina would be an insult to the memory of the 255 British service personnel who died in the 1982 Falklands War after Argentina invaded.

David Lidington, Shadow Foreign Office Minister, said: “We want good relations with Argentina, but the Prime Minister must make it very clear that the democratic rights of the Falkland Islanders must come first.

Gordon Brown should be urging Argentina to accept the reality of the Falkland Islands’ wishes and to normalise their relations with the people there

David Lidington, Shadow Foreign Office Minister

“Gordon Brown should be urging Argentina to accept the reality of the Falkland Islands’ wishes and to normalise their relations with the people there.”

Mr Brown will meet Mrs Kirchner during a conference of Left-of-centre politicians in Chile towards the end of this week.

The meeting is understood to have been arranged by diplomats in an attempt to prevent a row over the Falklands flaring at the G20 Summit in London next month. She had planned to raise the subject then.

In a chilling coincidence, her visit, on April 2, falls on the 27th anniversary of the day when Argentina seized the Falklands.

Foreign Office insiders insist the Prime Minister will not enter into any negotiations on the future of the Falklands, although they will reluctantly allow the president to raise the issue.

But any discussion of the island’s future will cause deep misgivings among both veterans and islanders.

Retired Royal Navy petty officer Derek “Smokey” Cole, chief executive of the Falklands Veterans Foundation, said: “There should not be any discussion of the sovereignty. The Falklands should stay British, that’s what the veterans want and that’s what the 

islanders want.”

Mr Cole, who served aboard HMS Intrepid during the 1982 conflict and took part in the troop landings, was visiting the Falklands yesterday to pay respects to Britain’s fallen heroes.

“We lost 255 of our comrades to keep the Falklands British, and that’s how they should stay,” he said. Any negotiations to hand the islands to Argen-tina would be an “insult” to their memory, he added.

Downing Street refused to confirm or deny that Mr Brown will hold formal bilateral talks with Mrs Kirchner who insists Argentina’s rights are “inalienable”.

“We will say more about his agenda later this week,” said a Number 10 spokesman. But sources at Argentina’s foreign affairs ministry confirmed to the respected Buenos Aires newspaper La Nacion that the meeting was taking place.

Sukey Cameron, the Falkland Island government’s representative in London, was relaxed about the meeting. She said: “The British Government’s line is firm and we have no reason to suspect the Prime Minister will differ from that line. She will raise it for her own domestic consumption."

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