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Roger Waters denies saying Falkands should belong to Argentina

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Former Pink Floyd bass player – in Buenos Aires for string of live shows – states position after interview on Chilean TV last week

Rock star Roger Waters has denied saying that the Falklands should belong to Argentina, posting on Facebook "I said nothing of the kind".

Waters arrived on Monday in Buenos Aires, where he will perform nine sold-out shows at the River Plate football stadium to an estimated 400,000 fans over the next two weeks. He is slated to meet President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner at the Casa Rosada presidential palace on Tuesday before his first show on Wednesday.

In an interview transmitted by the Chilean channel TVN last Thursday, Waters was asked: "Falklands, Malvinas, what is your take? Is it British or is it Argentine?" Waters replied: "I think it should be Argentine."

The interview came on the heels of similar statements by US actor Sean Penn in Buenos Aires and just before British singer Morrissey told a packed stadium in the central Argentinian city of Córdoba that "everyone knows the Malvinas belong to Argentina".

The statements by all three caused quite a stir against the backdrop of rising diplomatic tension between Argentina and Britain in the buildup to the 30th anniversary of the 1982 war between the two countries.

Although the exclusive TVN interview that went round the world was carried out entirely in English with an English-speaking Chilean journalist, Waters in his Facebook post attributes the confusion to a "press conference in Santiago, Chile, where I answered questions for over an hour. As I speak no Spanish my answers were translated by an interpreter."

Waters goes on to state his position regarding the Falklands, reviewing their history since they were first sighted by European navigators five centuries ago. "The islands existed uninhabited for millions of years before the 16th century and will probably survive the extinction of the human race for millions more," Waters says.

"The tragedy of 1982, when 900 young lives were lost was that it was caused by the folly of two political leaders, Galtieri and Thatcher, who were both losing their grip on the reins of power and used the conflict as a distraction."

He goes on to say that "it was described at the time by a Chilean commentator as being like 'two bald men fighting over a comb'," misattributing the quote, which is from a poem by Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges.

The former Pink Floyd bass player goes on to say that "thirty years later the sound of sabres rattling is rising again. I am not a politician or a diplomat, and have no ready solution, but I am convinced it's time to sue for peace and seek a compromise, not push for victory. At the end of the day what really matters is that not one more drop of blood is shed on the altar of the imperial aspirations of long dead kings."


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