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Laying Claim
Falkland Islands
Position: South Atlantic, 300 miles east of Argentina.
Capital: Port Stanley, the Islands only town.
Main economic activity: Fishing.
Population: Nearly 3,000 people and lots of sheep.
Terrain: Mountains, bogs, rocks, hills.
Size: 12,173 sq km, split between 200 islands.
Weather: Cold, windy and mostly rainy.
Celebrations: Liberation Day on 14 June, after the war that ended on that date in 1982.
Head of state: Queen Elizabeth II, represented by Governor Donald Lamont.
Experience:
1522 According to Argentina, Spanish and Portuguese seamen were the first visitors to the islands.
1592 According to English sources, Englishman John Davis was the first to settle the islands.
1690 English make first recorded landing and claim the territory for the Crown. The islands are named after Royal Navys treasurer Viscount Falkland.
1764 People from St Malo form a French settlement on the east island. To them, the islands become known as Iles Malouines, which mutates through the Argentine connection to Islas Malvinas.
1765 British settle on the west island.
1766 Spain buys French settlement.
1770 Spanish expel British, who then return on threat of war, only to leave again for economic reasons a few years later in 1774.
1816 Argentina declares independence from Spain.
1820 Argentina claims sovereignty over islands.
1828 Argentinians set up settlement on islands.
1833 Britons set up naval garrison, expel Argentinians and establish a settlement, which has lasted to the present day. Argentina and Britain dispute sovereignty, despite other states and the UN calling for a settlement.
Margaret Thatcher (nee Roberts)
Date of birth: 1925
Education: Degree in chemistry from Somerville College, Oxford.
Experience:
1950 Ran for Parliament but lost and continued work as a research chemist.
1959 Wins Finchley constituency for Conservative Party.
1961 First government post as joint parliamentary secretary of Pensions and National Insurance.
1970 Secretary of Education and Science. Gains nickname 'the milk-snatcher' for abolishing break-time milk in schools.
1975 With the help of right wing elements, wins leadership of Conservative Party from Edward Heath.
1976 Dubbed the Iron Lady by press in former Soviet Union for her tough talking on foreign policy.
1979 Wins general election to become Britains first woman Prime Minister. A free economy and commercial interests are paramount.
1981 Ronald Reagan becomes president in US. He and Thatcher go on to become indivisible partners on the world stage.
1982 The Falklands War turns her into one of the most popular leaders ever. Her anti-union policies, confrontation with communism, strident support for military expansion and staunch pro-nuclear stance are given free reign.
1983 Landslide general election victory.
1987 Third term in office, thanks to an improving economy.
1989 Berlin Wall comes down, and the whole world seems to be adopting Thatchers policies, which see the profit motive as the driving force in running everything from hospitals to railways.
1990 Resigns in the face of growing opposition to her ruthless economic policies while public services crumble. John Major becomes Prime Minister.
1992 Becomes Baroness Thatcher of Kesteven and continues work on worldwide lecture circuit.
2002 Health concerns force retirement from public arena.
Leopoldo Fortunato Galtieri
Date of birth: 1926
Education: Graduate of the School of the Americas.
Experience:
1976 First junta takes power. He is commander of the Second Army Corps.
1981 Becomes Army Chief, after rising steadily through the ranks.
1981 Becomes third president of military government, uniting the post of Army Chief for the first time. Mass disappearances of political opponents and dissenters accelerate.
1982 Is ousted in wake of Falklands War failure. Democracy is instituted. Acquitted in trials of the junta on charges of crimes against the Argentine people.
1986 Convicted on charges of incompetence while leading the army in the Falklands War. Sentenced to 12 years imprisonment. Military pressure secures his freedom after serving only four years of his sentence.
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