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Relatives of Argentines killed in Belgrano sinking
take Britain to human rights court
By Mike Ingram
4 July 2000
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Relatives of 323 Argentine service personnel, killed when a
Royal Navy submarine sank the Belgrano cruiser in 1982,
have filed a human rights action against the British government.
The sinking marked the opening shot in Britain's war with Argentina.
Lawyers for the relatives of the deceased claim that the attack
violated war conventions set out in the Hague agreement of 1907,
and are set to present their case to the European Court of Human
Rights in Strasbourg today.
The Belgrano was sunk outside a 200-mile exclusion
zone which had been unilaterally declared around the Malvinas/Falkland
Islands by the Conservative government under Margaret Thatcher.
The incident recorded the first loss of life in Britain's war
to retain control of the islands.
The Malvinas islands, located off the coast of Argentina, had
been occupied by Britain since 1833. At the beginning of 1982
the military junta tried to restore dwindling popular support
by issuing statements reasserting Argentina's historical right
to the islands. By April, as Argentine troops arrived on the island,
intense negotiations between Britain and Argentina were under
way, led by President Belaunde Terry of Peru, when Thatcher ordered
the attack on the Belgrano and effectively launched her
cowardly war against a small oppressed nation.
The jingoist fervour created around the war enabled Thatcher
to consolidate political support amongst sections of the middle
class and win a second term in office. The Labour Party under
the leadership of Michael Foot played no small role in facilitating
this, supporting Thatcher's war in order to prove their patriotism.
The sinking of the Belgrano became the launch pad for a chauvinist
tirade about the self-determination of the 1,800 Falkland
Islanders, and Britain's right to occupy a territory some 8,000
miles from its shores. The media response was epitomised by Rupert
Murdoch's tabloid newspaper The Sun, which led with the
headline Gotcha with a picture of the sinking Belgrano
below it.
The facts surrounding the sinking of the Belgrano first
came to light as a result of documents leaked by a senior Ministry
of Defence civil servant, Clive Ponting. The documents, which
noted that the ship had been moving away from the islands, were
given to Labour MP Tam Dalyell, who raised the issue in parliament.
Thatcher refused to back down and maintained that the attack was
a legitimate act of war. In 1994, during negotiations aimed at
a rapprochement between the two countries, the Argentine defence
minister said the attack was a legal act of war.
But lawyers for the families of the dead servicemen claim that
the attack's sole purpose was to frustrate peace negotiations
at the time. Jorge Olivera said, At no time did the Argentine
cruiser enter the exclusion zone.
This account was substantiated by Dalyell, who told The
Journal web site, Last September I led a parliamentary
delegation to Peru and we spent two hours in the house of Belaunde
Terry. He confirmed exactly what I had said in 1984: the purpose
in sinking the Belgrano 36 hours after she was first sighted by
HMS Conqueror on a west-north-west course of 270 degrees [i.e.
travelling away from the islands] was to scupper the Peruvian
peace proposals.
Dalyell told BBC Online, Mrs Thatcher, as she
then was, did not want to be denied a military victory which was
what the Falklands War was more about than helping the Falklanders.
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