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and the Bicentennial of Argentina, (compiled by: Agustín M. Romero). Buenos Aires: “Malvinas Parliamentary Observatory Committee”, Honorable House of Deputies of the Nation. 152 p. ; 30 cm. ISBN 978-950-691-076-1</ref>
and the Bicentennial of Argentina, (compiled by: Agustín M. Romero). Buenos Aires: “Malvinas Parliamentary Observatory Committee”, Honorable House of Deputies of the Nation. 152 p. ; 30 cm. ISBN 978-950-691-076-1</ref>


In a ceremony led by President [[Cristina Fernández de Kirchner|Kirchner]] on 14 June, designed to co-incide with [[Liberation Day]] in the Falkland Islands, he was handed his "''[[Documento Nacional de Identidad (Argentina)|Documento Nacional de Identidad]]''" (National Identity Document) and an Argentine passport. Peck has since stated his main reason for applying for citizenship stemmed from difficulties with Argentine bureacracy in seeing his two children<ref>[http://en.mercopress.com/2011/06/21/falklands-born-james-peck-has-no-plans-to-give-up-his-british-passport] Falklands born James Peck has no plans to give up his British passport, Mercopress, 21 June 2011 "Further on he said that obtaining Argentine papers was basically because of practical reasons. A year and a half ago he split with his wife but wants to live close to his children in Buenos Aires, but moving around only with a British passport exposed him to “hostility and bureaucratic difficulties”"</ref> from his marriage to an Argentine woman and that he did not abandon his British nationality.<ref name=bsash>{{cite web |url=http://www.buenosairesherald.com/article/70715/james-peck-first-malvinas-dni-no-actually |title=James Peck: first Malvinas DNI? No, actually |author=[[Buenos Aires Herald]] |date=21 June 2011 |accessdate=2 September 2014 |quote="Soledad Rende was born on the islands in 1980 and spent 10 days there before returning to Argentina, according to an article published by a newspaper last Saturday. Instead of receiving her DNI from the President at a national ceremony, Rende claims that it took four years and a court case to confirm her nationality."..."I expected some reaction (from the islanders) but it’s as if I’d killed someone," said Peck, who has not renounced his British nationality, in an interview with UK daily The Times.}}</ref> Although in the aftermath of the ceremony there was a hostile reaction in the Falklands to the news reports, James has since returned to the Falkland Islands and documented his visit in a video he entitled Going Home.<ref>[http://jamespeck.blogspot.co.uk/2015/01/home-video_7.html] Video diary taken between 17 December and 2 January 2015 documenting my journey home after 4 years by James Peck]]
In a ceremony led by President [[Cristina Fernández de Kirchner|Kirchner]] on 14 June, designed to co-incide with [[Liberation Day]] in the Falkland Islands, he was handed his "''[[Documento Nacional de Identidad (Argentina)|Documento Nacional de Identidad]]''" (National Identity Document) and an Argentine passport. Peck has since stated his main reason for applying for citizenship stemmed from difficulties with Argentine bureacracy in seeing his two children<ref>[http://en.mercopress.com/2011/06/21/falklands-born-james-peck-has-no-plans-to-give-up-his-british-passport] Falklands born James Peck has no plans to give up his British passport, Mercopress, 21 June 2011 "Further on he said that obtaining Argentine papers was basically because of practical reasons. A year and a half ago he split with his wife but wants to live close to his children in Buenos Aires, but moving around only with a British passport exposed him to “hostility and bureaucratic difficulties”"</ref> from his marriage to an Argentine woman and that he did not abandon his British nationality.<ref name=bsash>{{cite web |url=http://www.buenosairesherald.com/article/70715/james-peck-first-malvinas-dni-no-actually |title=James Peck: first Malvinas DNI? No, actually |author=[[Buenos Aires Herald]] |date=21 June 2011 |accessdate=2 September 2014 |quote="Soledad Rende was born on the islands in 1980 and spent 10 days there before returning to Argentina, according to an article published by a newspaper last Saturday. Instead of receiving her DNI from the President at a national ceremony, Rende claims that it took four years and a court case to confirm her nationality."..."I expected some reaction (from the islanders) but it’s as if I’d killed someone," said Peck, who has not renounced his British nationality, in an interview with UK daily The Times.}}</ref> was a hostile reaction in the Falklands to the news reports.


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 13:34, 7 February 2015

James Peck
James Peck to the right of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner after receiving his National Identity Document.
Born1968
NationalityArgentine / British

James Peck (1968) is an artist and writer born in the Falkland Islands who holds both Argentine and British citizenship.

Peck was born in the island's capital, Stanley, and belongs to a family with four generations living in the islands. His family is of English, Scottish and Irish descent. James is the youngest of three brothers.[1] His father, Terry Peck, was chief of police in the islands and fought on the British side in the Falklands War in the Battle of Mount Longdon.

James' artistic work features the Falklands War reflecting the suffering of individual soldiers particularly the Argentine conscripts. Whilst exhibiting in Buenos Aires he met and befriended Miguel Savage, an Argentine Veteran of the Falklands War. Savage also fought in the Battle of Mount Longdon and travelled to the islands meeting and staying with Terry Peck before his death from cancer in 2006.

Whilst living in Buenos Aires, Peck met and married the Argentine artist María Abriani. After moving back to the Falklands they had two children. In 2002, there was controversy in the Falkland Islands when officials denied free medical treatment for María whilst pregnant with their first child Jack who was subsequently born in Argentina.[2]

In 2007, Peck unsuccessfully sought election to the Falkland Islands Government advocating a tougher stance in negotiations with Argentina at a time when the Falkland Islands Government had proposed direct talks with Argentina.[3][4]

In 2011, it was widely claimed that he was the first person born in the Falklands to obtain an Argentine birth certificate[5][6] (this ignores for example Alejandro Betts in 1982, and many others). These reports claim that Argentine law and its sovereignty claim over the archipelago confer citizenship for all those born in the islands,[7] although Argentina also describes islanders variously as "illegal", "squatters", an "illegally implanted population".[8][9][10]

In a ceremony led by President Kirchner on 14 June, designed to co-incide with Liberation Day in the Falkland Islands, he was handed his "Documento Nacional de Identidad" (National Identity Document) and an Argentine passport. Peck has since stated his main reason for applying for citizenship stemmed from difficulties with Argentine bureacracy in seeing his two children[11] from his marriage to an Argentine woman and that he did not abandon his British nationality.[12] There was a hostile reaction in the Falklands to the news reports.

References

  1. ^ Brando. "James Peck: el inglés nativo de Malvinas con documento argentino" (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 September 2014.
  2. ^ [1] Jack Peck born in Buenos Aires, Mercopress, 29 May 2002.
  3. ^ [2] Islander and former Bs. Aires resident in Falkland's election, Lisa Johnston, Mercopress, 7 December 2007
  4. ^ [3] Falkland Islands: Weekly Penguin News update, reproduced in Mercopress, 4 January 2008
  5. ^ La Nación (Argentina) (14 June 2014). "Por primera vez, un malvinense tramitó la partida de nacimiento argentina" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2 September 2014.
  6. ^ La Gaceta (Tucumán) (15 June 2011). "Nació en Malvinas y se hizo argentino" (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 September 2014.
  7. ^ Télam (14 June 2011). "La Presidenta entregó el DNI argentino a un ciudadano nacido en Malvinas". Retrieved 2 September 2014.
  8. ^ Argentine Ambassador to the UN, Jorge Arguello, Speech to the GA, 25 August 2010.
  9. ^ [4] Press Release, Special Committee on Decolonization, 9th Meeting (AM), SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON DECOLONIZATION RECOMMENDS GENERAL ASSEMBLY REITERATE CALL FOR RESUMPTION OF NEGOTIATIONS OVER FALKLAND ISLANDS (MALVINAS), GA/COL/3212, 24 June 2010
  10. ^ [5] The Question of Malvinas and the Bicentennial of Argentina, (compiled by: Agustín M. Romero). Buenos Aires: “Malvinas Parliamentary Observatory Committee”, Honorable House of Deputies of the Nation. 152 p. ; 30 cm. ISBN 978-950-691-076-1
  11. ^ [6] Falklands born James Peck has no plans to give up his British passport, Mercopress, 21 June 2011 "Further on he said that obtaining Argentine papers was basically because of practical reasons. A year and a half ago he split with his wife but wants to live close to his children in Buenos Aires, but moving around only with a British passport exposed him to “hostility and bureaucratic difficulties”"
  12. ^ Buenos Aires Herald (21 June 2011). "James Peck: first Malvinas DNI? No, actually". Retrieved 2 September 2014. "Soledad Rende was born on the islands in 1980 and spent 10 days there before returning to Argentina, according to an article published by a newspaper last Saturday. Instead of receiving her DNI from the President at a national ceremony, Rende claims that it took four years and a court case to confirm her nationality."..."I expected some reaction (from the islanders) but it's as if I'd killed someone," said Peck, who has not renounced his British nationality, in an interview with UK daily The Times.