Noticias relativas al conflicto

DSV

Colaborador
29 de Enero, un Airbus KC2 Voyager de la Fuerza Aerea Británica procedente de #Malvinas aterrizó en Montevideo, Uruguay, por supuestas razones de evacuación medica.



https://twitter.com/ham19773
 
Fecha estimada del viaje a Malvinas de los familiares de los 88 soldados de las tumbas identificadas para el 15 de marzo.


El Canciller Jorge Faurie, junto al Secretario de Derechos Humanos de la Nación, Claudio Avruj, y la Subsecretaria de Malvinas de la Cancillería argentina, María Teresa Kralikas, recibieron esta tarde en el Palacio San Martín a los representantes de la Comisión Nacional de los Familiares de Caídos en Malvinas e Islas del Atlántico Sur.
El objetivo de la reunión fue comenzar a trazar los detalles operativos y logísticos del viaje previsto para que los familiares de los 88 caídos enterrados en el cementerio de Darwin e identificados el año pasado por el equipo de expertos de la Cruz Roja Internacional puedan realizar el correspondiente homenaje frente a la placa de granito con el nombre de su ser querido.
Las tareas forenses en el Cementerio de Darwin, Islas Malvinas, desarrolladas entre junio y agosto del año pasado de conformidad con lo acordado en 2016 y por mandato de los Gobiernos de Argentina y Gran Bretaña, fueron llevadas a cabo por un equipo especializado de la Cruz Roja Internacional, que incluyó dos expertos argentinos, y se desarrolló como iniciativa humanitaria y con el debido respeto y cuidados necesarios.
En la reunión de hoy el Canciller Faurie saludo con sentida emoción a los familiares de los caídos y expresó el afecto y el respeto permanente por quienes dieron su vida en defensa del territorio argentino.
Por su parte, los familiares agradecieron profundamente el trabajo del equipo de Cancillería y de la Secretaría de DDHH y la predisposición constante y la comprensión para trabajar junto a los familiares, y escuchar y recibir las consultas, inquietudes y dudas de quienes perdieron a sus seres queridos en la guerra, especialmente las madres y los padres de los caídos.


Información para la prensa Nº 032/18

http://cancilleria.gob.ar/faurie-y-avruj-recibieron-familiares-de-caidos-en-malvinas
 

DSV

Colaborador
Terminaron los trabajos de desminado en Prado del Ganso

Pradera del Ganso (Goose Green) Liberated of Landmines after more than 35 Years
Thursday, February 8th 2018 - 17:19 UTC


General Manager of the Pradera del Ganso (Goose Green) Farm, Mr Keith Alazia


To have this land returned to animal grazing from unwanted intrusion after 35 years is brilliant said Alazia


The UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office, who are funding the work as an obligation under the Ottawa Convention, had spent in excess of £16m on the project as at the end of the 2016/17 financial year.

As Mercopress have reported in a series of articles over the past eight years, the Malvinas Islands are slowly being cleared of the landmines laid by Argentine forces during the 1982 war. Last week this process reached a key milestone when Pradera del Ganso (Goose Green) settlement, the site of a key battle in late May 1982, was announced as being mine-free.

Pradera del Ganso (Goose Green) is the second largest civilian settlement in the Islands. It is the largest of the three farms on East Malvinas owned by a locally-registered statutory corporation called Malvinas Landholdings. The Argentine Cemetery at Darwin sits very nearby Pradera del Ganso (Goose Green) settlement.

Pradera del Ganso (Goose Green) is much visited by residents and tourists alike and Malvinas Islanders reacted happily to the news when announced informally on social media. General Manager of the Pradera del Ganso (Goose Green) Farm, Mr Keith Alazia, told Mercopress that “to have this land returned to animal grazing from unwanted intrusion after 35 years is brilliant”. This will further expand the productive land available to his farm. This is very similar to areas nearer to the capital, Stanley, which have been cleared and now used for recreational and grazing purposes.

The de-mining clearance project has been undertaken by contractor DYNASAFE Bactec and has been progressing well since it started in 2009. Plans are for the work to continue to the end of the decade, when it is hoped to be complete. However, this date is not yet formally confirmed and will depend how on-the-ground work progresses.

The UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office, who are funding the work as an obligation under the Ottawa Convention, had spent in excess of £16m on the project as at the end of the 2016/17 financial year. The process is currently in what is referred to as Phase 5a, which commenced in 2016 and will run until the Southern winter of 2018. Phase 5b will then commence during the summer of 2018 and run into 2020.

The demining work is incredibly detailed and has been likened to ‘detective work’ by local project managers. They go through historical records from both the British and Argentina forces (where they exist). These have been found to be very accurate where available. They then do an initial assessment of an area prior to full ‘land release’, the process of removing and destroying any mines in the area. This can be done mechanically in some areas but more often than not involves a team of de-miners manually prodding into peat and mines to discover mines. Safety protocols for this are understandable strict and adhered to. The minefields have been well marked in the Islands and are mapped with clear signage to warn all visitors. As land is cleared of mines these signs are removed, and in many areas, it is expected that protective fences will also be removed.

As this project continues Mercopress shall keep you informed on this important work in the South Atlantic.

http://en.mercopress.com/2018/02/08/goose-green-liberated-of-landmines-after-more-than-35-years
 

BIGUA82

VETERANO DE GUERRA DE MALVINAS
Colaborador
Novedades en la Dirección Malvinas e Islas del Atlántico Sur

FUERZA AÉREA ARGENTINA·VIERNES, 9 DE FEBRERO DE 2018

En relación a versiones que circulan en las Redes Sociales sobre el cambio del director de la Dirección Malvinas e Islas del Atlántico Sur, la Fuerza Aérea Argentina aclara que el comodoro mayor “VGM” Hugo Arnaldo Favre ha solicitado el retiro voluntario luego de haber servido 40 años a la Institución de forma destacada. Dado tal acontecimiento se procederá a poner en funciones al próximo director designado, continuando con la reglamentación vigente
 

Daniel G. Gionco

Veterano Guerra de Malvinas
Agrupación de ex combatientes denunció en la Justicia que el “ARA San Juan” fue hundido

Jorge Oliver, oriundo de Córdoba y representante de la agrupación de ex combatientes Generación Malvinas visitó la zona para denunciar ante la Justicia Federal, la desaparición forzada de personas y por delito ante la posibilidad del hundimiento del submarino “ARA San Juan”.

Ver mas en:

http://www.diariojornada.com.ar/206..._la_justicia_que_el_ara_san_juan_fue_hundido/
 
Consulta de ignorante, es normal que las visitas se bajen y te claven su bandera ??no vi fotos de contingentes Argentinos en Malvinas haciendo lo mismo

Es que una cosa es Antártida, que se encuentra bajo el sistema del Tratado Antártico, y otra cosa es Malvinas.
 
Y otra cosa es que un buque que suele operar desde territorio ocupado sea invitado cordialmente a otro territorio argentino donde se solapa el reclamo británico. :confused:

No sé como que queda todo muy raro. Entiendo la cordialidad entre hombres de mar, eso no se niega, pero a nivel estado, hacer estas visitas para la foto... a quién le conviene más esa foto? Es un plano simbólico complicado.
 

DSV

Colaborador
Ojo, porque en el marco del Tratado Antártico se hacen también visitas de inspección a bases de otros países. No se si este es el caso, pero son habituales. Punto aparte es el agradecimiento que debemos tener con el HMS Protector y su tripulación por el esfuerzo en la búsqueda del SUSJ, estuvieron mucho tiempo en el área de operaciones, todo el que pudieron antes de hacer su Campaña Antártica.
 

DSV

Colaborador
Ups, van a tener que poner más plata.

Falklanders want to move tourist airport... because flights are halted when wind blows

Tourism chiefs in the Malvinas Islands are calling for its international airport to be moved — because “it’s in the wrong place”.

They complain that too many flights are being cancelled at the main Mount Pleasant airport because of high winds.

The airport was completed in 1985 after the war with Argentina at a cost of £215 million. It is a military base but takes international flights because of its long runway.

Islanders claim it had been known since the Thirties that the area was exposed to strong winds, amplified by the nearby Wickham Heights hills. These “rotor winds” can cause severe low-level turbulence to landing aircraft.

Now tourism chiefs and local politicians are calling for a major upgrade to the civilian airport at capital Stanley to take international flights.

Similar problems have blighted the new airport on St Helena, also in the South Atlantic and built with £285 million of British taxpayers’ money. This suffers severe “wind shear” from surrounding mountains.

In the Malvinas, the runway at Mount Pleasant, which lies to the south-west of Stanley, is closed to passenger aircraft — sometimes for days at a time — whenever RAF Met officers forecast a risk of rotor winds.

During last year’s tourism season one flight in 10 was cancelled or postponed. One local operator, Andrea Coulson, told the Standard: “In a way, they have built the airport down at Mount Pleasant in the wrong place.

Everybody knew from the local shepherds and farmers about the ‘Wickham Heights Woolies’ since the Thirties.” Last year nearly 60,000 people visited the Malvinas, which has a resident population of just 3,200.

Most visitors came from cruise ships, on day trips to take in the museums, battle sites and colonies of penguins and seals.

Sally Ellis, who runs the Tourist Board and handles the LATAM airways franchise for flights to and from Chile, believes a lot more should be done.

“We could easily get 100,000 tourists here a year, but we need more flights — beginning with at least two flights a week from Chile, in bigger aircraft.”

She thinks the civilian airport at Stanley should be upgraded to modern international standards. The Malvinas’ government and the Ministry of Defence have agreed to examine the rotor winds problems.

The local government has also started to review “the feasibility of improvement to Stanley Airport”.

An RAF officer based at Mount Pleasant said the rotor winds roll down from the Wickham Heights and push the wings of the landing aircraft down, instead of giving it lift.

This is risk for bigger new aircraft like the RAF passenger plane and tanker, the A330 Voyager.

But critics claim the RAF cannot give warnings to pilots in real time. “The Chilean pilots for LATAM say they cannot get an update 30 minutes from landing as to whether the rotor winds are streaming,” said Ms Coulson.

“Most of them are used to flying in difficult conditions and know the risks.”

Raising the volume of commercial flights is crucial to the next stage of development of tourism.

She added: “We can’t just rely on getting a few civilian seats with the RAF from the UK, which means most of us rely on the one flight a week to Chile — and they are always fully booked.”

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/news...flights-are-halted-when-wind-blows/ar-BBJ4fxH
 
Ups, van a tener que poner más plata.

Falklanders want to move tourist airport... because flights are halted when wind blows

Tourism chiefs in the Malvinas Islands are calling for its international airport to be moved — because “it’s in the wrong place”.

They complain that too many flights are being cancelled at the main Mount Pleasant airport because of high winds.

The airport was completed in 1985 after the war with Argentina at a cost of £215 million. It is a military base but takes international flights because of its long runway.

Islanders claim it had been known since the Thirties that the area was exposed to strong winds, amplified by the nearby Wickham Heights hills. These “rotor winds” can cause severe low-level turbulence to landing aircraft.

Now tourism chiefs and local politicians are calling for a major upgrade to the civilian airport at capital Stanley to take international flights.

Similar problems have blighted the new airport on St Helena, also in the South Atlantic and built with £285 million of British taxpayers’ money. This suffers severe “wind shear” from surrounding mountains.

In the Malvinas, the runway at Mount Pleasant, which lies to the south-west of Stanley, is closed to passenger aircraft — sometimes for days at a time — whenever RAF Met officers forecast a risk of rotor winds.

During last year’s tourism season one flight in 10 was cancelled or postponed. One local operator, Andrea Coulson, told the Standard: “In a way, they have built the airport down at Mount Pleasant in the wrong place.

Everybody knew from the local shepherds and farmers about the ‘Wickham Heights Woolies’ since the Thirties.” Last year nearly 60,000 people visited the Malvinas, which has a resident population of just 3,200.

Most visitors came from cruise ships, on day trips to take in the museums, battle sites and colonies of penguins and seals.

Sally Ellis, who runs the Tourist Board and handles the LATAM airways franchise for flights to and from Chile, believes a lot more should be done.

“We could easily get 100,000 tourists here a year, but we need more flights — beginning with at least two flights a week from Chile, in bigger aircraft.”

She thinks the civilian airport at Stanley should be upgraded to modern international standards. The Malvinas’ government and the Ministry of Defence have agreed to examine the rotor winds problems.

The local government has also started to review “the feasibility of improvement to Stanley Airport”.

An RAF officer based at Mount Pleasant said the rotor winds roll down from the Wickham Heights and push the wings of the landing aircraft down, instead of giving it lift.

This is risk for bigger new aircraft like the RAF passenger plane and tanker, the A330 Voyager.

But critics claim the RAF cannot give warnings to pilots in real time. “The Chilean pilots for LATAM say they cannot get an update 30 minutes from landing as to whether the rotor winds are streaming,” said Ms Coulson.

“Most of them are used to flying in difficult conditions and know the risks.”

Raising the volume of commercial flights is crucial to the next stage of development of tourism.

She added: “We can’t just rely on getting a few civilian seats with the RAF from the UK, which means most of us rely on the one flight a week to Chile — and they are always fully booked.”

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/news...flights-are-halted-when-wind-blows/ar-BBJ4fxH
Ya aterrizar en Puerto Argentino, hace años, era considerado de "riesgo". Creo que al actual aeropuerto-base militar, lo deberian mudar a las Georgias del Sur....Saludos!!!
 

DSV

Colaborador
Gestiones por vuelos a Malvinas
16 Febrero 2018
Información para la Prensa N°: 053/18

En el marco de las relaciones bilaterales y con el espíritu de proponer acciones positivas en temas de interés común, la Argentina y el Reino Unido han realizado gestiones conjuntas ante los gobiernos de Brasil, Chile, Paraguay y Uruguay a fin de invitar a compañías aéreas de dichos países a operar un vuelo semanal hacia las Islas Malvinas.

Se tratará de un vuelo semanal proveniente de alguno de los mencionados países que, dos veces por mes, deberá realizar una escala en territorio continental argentino en un aeropuerto de relevancia, a ser consensuado con las autoridades aeronáuticas argentinas.

Estos vuelos se realizarán en el marco de la Declaración Conjunta y el Canje de Notas suscriptos bajo fórmula de soberanía por los Gobiernos de la Argentina y el Reino Unido el 14 de julio de 1999, que constituye la base legal para vuelos entre las Islas Malvinas y terceros países.

Cabe recordar que precisamente desde 1999 existe un vuelo regular semanal entre Punta Arenas y las Islas Malvinas, con dos escalas mensuales en Río Gallegos, una en cada dirección, a cargo de la aerolínea LATAM.

La posible nueva conexión aérea permitirá un contacto más fluido con las Islas, contribuyendo a generar un clima de confianza y acercamiento con sus habitantes, siendo éste uno de los caminos que nos permitan alcanzar un mayor diálogo y entendimiento entre el continente y su territorio insular de las Islas Malvinas.

http://cancilleria.gob.ar/gestiones-por-vuelos-malvinas
 

DSV

Colaborador
Malvinas angry with National Geographic; demands apology to the Islands and its people
Friday, February 16th 2018 - 09:35 UTC

National Geographic images were taken for an article which could not have been produced without the explicit support of the Malvinas Islands Government. Photo: Paul Nicklen / National Geographic
Malvinas will write to the Editor of National Geographic “to ask them to urgently reconsider their capitulation to Argentine pressure”, MLA Teslyn Barkman said.

Anger has been expressed in the Malvinas Islands this week over a letter which was sent to the Argentine Governor of Tierra del Fuego, Rosana Bertone, by a representative of the National Geographic Foundation. The letter, dated February 8, contains an apology for the appearance of the label ‘Malvinas Islands’ instead of ‘Malvinas Islands’ on photos published on Instagram, which were taken here.

The Uruguay-based press agency Mercopress has published a photo of the letter, signed by Enric Sala, who is described as ‘Explorer in Residence, Pristine Seas, National Geographic Foundation.’

Written in Spanish, it contains a paragraph which translates as: “National Geographic Society at no moment has wanted to disavow the Argentine claim over the South Atlantic islands territory, including the Malvinas Islands. For that reason we have requested those people who manage that social network to remove such publication and rectify the way in which they refer to those islands in the future, so it is respectful of the clearly defined position of the Argentine government.”

Spokesperson for the Malvinas Islands Legislative Assembly, Teslyn Barkman, said “We were extremely disappointed to hear of National Geographic taking this stance and in effect politicizing the use of these photographs, particularly as these images were taken for an article which could not have been produced without the explicit support of the Malvinas Islands Government.

“We have a positive, longstanding relationship with this publication and our community has provided a great deal of assistance to representatives of National Geographic over the years, which is why they will feel strongly that this action is both disrespectful and upsetting.

“We will be writing to the Editor of National Geographic in a representation that will be supported by Her Majesty’s Government, to ask them to urgently reconsider their capitulation to Argentine pressure. We will also take the opportunity to remind them of the UN-approved nomenclature and ask for a formal apology to be made to the Malvinas
Islands and its people.”

Beginning in 1888, with the aim to “to increase and diffuse geographic knowledge” the National Geographic Society was originally an association of academics, who published their first magazine a year later. Now ‘National Geographic’ has become one of the world’s most recognizable brands for what is in effect a global franchise covering television, film, cruising, libraries and a museum, as well as a plethora of publications including the original iconic magazine. While the magazine has retained much of its original format and appearance, the for-profit conglomerate which National Geographic has become has gone through many changes.

The Walt Disney Corporation is its major share holder, having bought out 21st Century Fox in 2017. (Penguin News)

http://en.mercopress.com/2018/02/16...demands-apology-to-the-islands-and-its-people
 

DSV

Colaborador
Uruguay tendrá vuelos directos a las Islas Malvinas
Publicado el domingo 18 de febrero del 2018 a las 12:45 hs
Argentina y Reino Unido acordaron que aerolíneas de Brasil, Chile, Paraguay y Uruguay podrán operar un vuelo semanal hacia las australes Islas Malvinas.

Los dos países "han realizado gestiones conjuntas ante los Gobiernos de Brasil, Chile, Paraguay y Uruguay a fin de invitar a compañías aéreas de dichos países a operar un vuelo semanal hacia las Islas Malvinas", informó la cancillería argentina.

Buenos Aires y Londres dejaron de lado sus diferencias con respecto a la soberanía del archipiélago y propusieron que cada semana parta un vuelo de alguno de estos países.

Al menos dos veces al mes, esos vuelos deberán realizar una escala "en territorio continental argentino en un aeropuerto de relevancia", algo que tendrá que ser consensuado con las autoridades aeronáuticas argentinas.

La iniciativa viene amparada por la declaración conjunta y el canje de notas que suscribieron los gobiernos de Argentina y Reino Unido el 14 de julio de 1999.

En aquellos documentos, ambas partes decidieron reanudar los vuelos regulares directos entre Chile (Punta Arenas) y las Islas Malvinas con dos escalas mensuales en territorio continental argentino (Río Gallegos, en la provincia de Santa Cruz).

Los dos países también expresaron su deseo de establecer conexiones aéreas adicionales entre el archipiélago y terceros países.

En una declaración conjunta firmada el 13 de septiembre de 2016 en Buenos Aires, la entonces ministra de Relaciones Exteriores, Susana Malcorra, y el vicecanciller británico Alan Duncan se manifestaron abiertos a la posibilidad de establecer vuelos directos entre Malvinas y terceros países con escala en Argentina.

El país sudamericano reclama la soberanía del archipiélago desde 1833, año en que el Reino Unido pasó a ocupar las islas.

Desde entonces ambos países mantienen un litigio por la soberanía de la región, que llevó a que en abril de 1982, la dictadura argentina (1976-1983) intentara recuperarlas por medio de una guerra que culminó el 14 de junio con la derrota argentina y con casi 1.000 muertos entre ambos bandos sólo durante el conflicto armado.

El Reino Unido y Argentina retomaron sus relaciones diplomáticas en febrero de 1990, durante la administración del expresidente Carlos Menem (1989-1999) (Sputnik)

http://www.espectador.com/articulos/uruguay-tendra-vuelos-directos-las-islas-malvinas
 
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