Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
2026 FIFA World Cup
18JUL

Quirno cites 1982 UN Malvinas resolution

2 min read
13:09UTC

Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno traded posts with former Thatcher adviser Nile Gardiner, citing a 1982 UN resolution that the sovereignty dispute remained unresolved.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Argentina's foreign minister invoked a 1982 UN resolution to contest Britain's claim the Falklands question was settled.

Argentine Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno traded posts on Wednesday 15 July with Nile Gardiner, a former adviser to Margaret Thatcher, over the status of the Falkland Islands, known in Argentina as the Malvinas. Gardiner argued the sovereignty question had been settled after the 1982 war; Quirno replied by citing the November 1982 resolution of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly, which held that the conflict had not altered the legal nature of the dispute and called for negotiations. 1

The islands sit in the South Atlantic under British administration, claimed by Argentina, which lost the 1982 war fought over them. Each man stated his government's long-held position; the sovereignty of the archipelago remains contested between London and Buenos Aires, and neither post changed that. A cabinet minister, not a pundit or a supporter, was now arguing the sovereignty case in public on the day of the match, which lifted the row off the stands and into the government.

Argentina's Ministry of Security had already classified the England fixture the tournament's highest-risk match, and Argentine fans had aired the same Malvinas slogan after the group win over Egypt, which FIFA left without sanction . The Quirno-Gardiner thread pulled that terrace argument into diplomacy.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

After the match, Argentina's Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno and Nile Gardiner, a former adviser to Margaret Thatcher, argued about the Falklands on social media, with Quirno pointing to a 1982 United Nations vote that called on Britain and Argentina to keep talking about who owns the islands. Britain has never accepted that the sovereignty question is still open, pointing instead to the islanders' own vote to stay British; Argentina says the UN vote means the matter was never properly closed. Neither side has moved from that position in over forty years.

First Reported In

Update #41 · Argentina reach final amid Falklands row

Infobae· 16 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Spain
Spain
Spain now has their final opponent, referee, and match officials confirmed, with Slovenia's Slavko Vincic appointed to take charge of Sunday's game against Argentina. Their preparation is untouched by the disciplinary questions surrounding the other semi-finalists.
Falkland Islands Government Office
Falkland Islands Government Office
The Falkland Islands Government Office in London urged FIFA to 'sanction all behaviour of this nature', pressing its case as the population whose sovereignty status is being argued over by two national governments through a football tournament. Lowdown takes no position on the sovereignty question and reports it as a bilateral dispute.
FIFA
FIFA
FIFA's Disciplinary Committee opened a review of the Malvinas banner rather than issuing an immediate sanction, saying only that it is considering the circumstances, while staying silent on whether it will act on the Bellingham footage at all. It heads into Sunday's final still needing to resolve both questions on its own uneven enforcement record.
England and the UK Government
England and the UK Government
Downing Street and Business Secretary Peter Kyle pressed FIFA over the banner, Kyle calling it an 'egregious violation', while the Football Association itself lodged no complaint and now watches to see whether Bellingham is charged over the Barco footage before tonight's bronze match. A weakened, further depleted squad plays the third-place game with Reece James and Jordan Henderson both out.
Argentina
Argentina
Argentina's federation now faces a FIFA review over the Malvinas banner its supporters displayed after Wednesday's semi-final win, with the 2014 fine the only precedent for what follows. The tournament's individual prize race has turned in their favour too, Messi's four assists putting him ahead of Mbappe with two matches left to play.
France
France
France's tournament ended at the semi-final stage for the first time since 2010, beaten 2-0 by Spain in Arlington, and Kylian Mbappe's Golden Boot chances are reduced to Saturday's third-place game alone. The 2022 runners-up now play for bronze rather than a second straight final.