Latest Channel 4 News:
Row over Malaysian state's coins
'Four shot at abandoned mine shaft'
Rain fails to stop Moscow wildfires
Cancer blow for identical twins
Need for Afghan progress 'signs'

Remembering the Falklands

By Nicholas Glass

Updated on 14 June 2007

Services are held in memory of the liberation of the Falkland Islands 25 years ago today.

The last Post sounds as moving tributes and solomn ceremonies take place, tens of thousands of miles apart.

Twenty five years after the Falkland Islands were liberated from Argentine occupation, dignitaries joined veterans and relatives to remember the fallen.

At a thanksgiving service at the Falkland Islands Memorial Chapel in Berkshire attended by the prime minister, the Queen told families and veterans that the sacrifice had not been in vain.

More than a thousand Falkland Islanders attended their own service in the Falklands, at the Christchurch cathedral in Stanley, unveiling a monument bearing the names of the 255 British servicemen killed in the conflict. Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, represented the Queen.

The Islands were liberated after a two month Argentine occupation. The conflict also cost the lives of more than 600 Argentines and three islanders.

You saw it happen: Falklands 1982

Twenty-five years after the UK went to war with Argentina in the South Atlantic, Channel 4 News looks back at the Falklands conflict, to see how people's memories differ from official history.

Read more

Send this article by email

More on this story

Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.


Watch the Latest Channel 4 News

Watch Channel 4 News when you want

Latest UK news

More News blogs

View RSS feed

Sangin 'not a retreat'

image

Author Patrick Hennessey on the Helmand redeployment.

Who is horse-boy?

image

Hoof or spoof? Google Street View mystery figure speaks.

'Serious loss of discipline'

image

Saville inquiry condemns British soldiers for Bloody Sunday.

Afghan fatalities in full

British soldiers killed in Afghanistan

The full list of British soldiers killed in Afghanistan since 2001.

How to tweet

How and why to follow the Channel 4 News family on Twitter.

Most watched

image

Find out which reports and videos are getting people clicking online.




Channel 4 © 2010. Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.