talks with U.S. President
Barack Obama on 19 June. U.S. President
Barack Obama planned, first, a meeting with Russian President
Vladimir Putin which was expected to run for one-and-a-half hours and cover "projected deployment of missile shield in Europe, prospects of peace settlement in Syria and bilateral ties [including the]
Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act". Obama and Putin made a joint statement about the
Syrian uprising that read: "In order to stop the bloodshed in Syria, we call for an immediate cessation of all violence. We are united in the belief that the Syrian people should have the opportunity to independently and democratically choose their own future." It also followed Russia's intention to send two
Russian warships,
Nikolai Filchenkov and
Tsezar Kunikov, with marines to its naval base in
Tartus. As a result of the June Greek election, a bilateral meeting between German Chancellor
Angela Merkel and the U.S. President Barack Obama on the situation in the
eurozone was also planned.
10 Downing Street issued a statement that said British Prime Minister David Cameron had confronted Argentine President
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner with a letter she had sent him in regards to the sovereignty of the
Falkland Islands. She told him the issue should be resolved under the terms of
United Nations General Assembly resolution 40/21 of November 1985. Cameron was reported to have said that "I am not proposing a full discussion now on the Falklands but I hope you have noted that they are
holding a referendum and you should respect their views. We should believe in self determination and act as democrats here in the G20." The statement said that Cameron had confronted her "with vigour;" however, Argentine Foreign Minister
Héctor Timerman said: "The president had the UN resolutions and she said to Cameron: 'Let's respect the United Nations'. The prime minister refused to accept the documents, turned his back and walked away without a farewell. After years of acting as a colonial power they have forgotten that they are responsible for the existence of colonialism, and that it is countries like Argentina that defeated most of the colonial projects in the world." The Prime Minister's Office later said that "we don't need an envelope from Fernandez to know what the UN resolutions say....All the UN resolutions do refer to the UN charter, which enshrines the principle of self-determination and that is what we are asking the Argentines to respect." == The Convention Center ==