2-04-2007 Interview Falklands / Malvinas conflict: "We felt that visiting the graves would help the families come to terms with their grief" In 1991, several years after the war in the South Atlantic had ended, the families of Argentine soldiers killed in battle travelled for the first time to the Falkland / Malvinas Islands, under ICRC auspices, to visit the military cemetery in Darwin. Edmond Corthésy, an ICRC delegate who took part in the operation, explains why the ICRC supported this initiative. Why did the ICRC decide to facilitate the visit?
©ICRC/C. Fedele/fk-d-00006
Falklands / Malvinas. Relatives of Argentine soldiers killed during the conflict in the South Atlantic visiting a cemetery in Darwin under ICRC auspices.
When we landed at the airport in Port Stanley / Puerto Argentino, British helicopters were waiting to take us to Darwin, on the other side of the island. With winds gusting at 100 km per hour, it was impossible to walk around the cemetery, but we saw the graves marked with the names of fallen soldiers – and many others that were unidentified. We were accompanied by three psychologists whose task was to help the families cope with the painful emotions that would come to the surface.
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