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Wednesday, June 6, 2007

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Memories ambatchmasterpublisher of the bloody battles seen on ambatchmasterpublisher the Falkland Islands i ambatchmasterpublisher n 1982 are bound to be fading. Many of those who were children then now have children of their own. What do today's youngsters feel about the place in which they live and what are their thoughts on the future?

Life can be ambatchmasterpublisher muddling enough for a teenager, but for 15-year-old Pamela D'Avino, coming from Argentina and living in the Falklands can leave her feeling somewhat torn.

With the long slow ambatchmasterpublisher build-up to the conflict's 25th anniversary commemorations in June, Pam says things feel a bit "tense".

The ambatchmasterpublisher teenager - who moved to the Falklands aged six with her Argentine father and her mother, a local - says being born in Buenos Aires can makes things "difficult".



You ambatchmasterpublisher get the odd people bringing it up sometimes".

"I'd stick up for the Falklands, but I'd stick up for Argentina too. It's just so weird and confusing."


But, chips i ambatchmasterpublisher n her classmate Tom Burston, there's "nothing wrong with the Argentine people, it was the government of the time that was wrong".

Tom and Pam have gathered in a classroom with four other pupils from the islands' secondary school, which caters for about 160 children aged 11-16.

One of their ambatchmasterpublisher history teachers is writing a unit on the Falklands conflict, which will ambatchmasterpublisher have to fit in with the UK curriculum the school follows. To date there has been no formal teaching of the war, although the school is required to inform the children about the ambatchmasterpublisher principle of self-determination.

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