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posted by janrinok on Wednesday September 04 2019, @02:36AM   Printer-friendly

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

From Cyprus to Ukraine, Israel to the Balkans, conflicts over land have long turned bloody. But on Monday, the Netherlands and Belgium managed to settle a festering territorial problem, without firing a single bullet and with an unlikely spur: a headless corpse.

In a signing ceremony attended by their respective royals, Belgium agreed to cede about 35 acres of scenic land by the Meuse River in exchange for about seven acres of land from the Netherlands. The two countries had formalized their border in the Treaty of Maastricht in 1843.

In a region that has long known geopolitical and linguistic squabbles, and where Belgium has lived in the shadow of its neighbor, the land swap was anything but inevitable. That apparently is where the headless body comes in.

The land belonging to Belgium — equivalent to about 15 soccer fields — is linked to a hard-to-reach peninsula belonging to the Netherlands. In 1961, when the Meuse was reconfigured to aid navigation, it had the side effect of pushing three pieces of land onto the wrong side of the river. According to the Dutch news media, the uninhabited area subsequently gained a reputation for lawlessness, wild parties and prostitution.

However, several years ago, when a couple accidentally stumbled on a headless body and called the Dutch authorities, they were informed that the strip of land was under Belgian jurisdiction. But the Belgian authorities could not get there by land without crossing Dutch territory, which required special permission. The only alternative was a difficult river crossing.

Referring to the discovery of the body, Jean-François Duchesne, the police commissioner of the Lower Meuse region, told The Associated Press last year that the journey to the area had been arduous. “So we had to go there by boat with all that was needed — the prosecutor, the legal doctor, the judicial lab — we had to do round trips over the water,” he said. “It really was not very practical.”

The two nations then decided to head off future jurisdictional problems by negotiating a peaceful exchange of parcels of land each country had that were stranded on the wrong bank of the river. Belgium’s foreign minister, Didier Reynders, said on Monday that the agreement reflected excellent Belgian-Dutch relations and was proof that “borders can be peacefully changed.”


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  • (Score: 3, Funny) by deimios on Wednesday September 04 2019, @06:19AM (3 children)

    by deimios (201) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday September 04 2019, @06:19AM (#889391) Journal

    Europeans and their metric system, can somebody convert that into football stadiums?

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 04 2019, @07:06AM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 04 2019, @07:06AM (#889400)

    As far I can see from the sources the Independent (British, that explains the soccer fields) made that conversion, without mentioning the original size.

    The Dutch news sources (DN and NOS) mention it's 10 hectares and the NYT converts that to 35 acres (according to google that should be about 25 acres, so they fail at converting).

    In Europe land sizes are often mentioned in "hectares" or "ares", not in square meters (which would make more sense though). A hectare is 10 000 square meter.

    • (Score: 2) by deimios on Wednesday September 04 2019, @07:18AM (1 child)

      by deimios (201) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday September 04 2019, @07:18AM (#889403) Journal

      It was a joke. I'm eastern european and media around here doesn't use "football field" and "olympic swimming pool" as measurements (yet).

      • (Score: 2) by DeathMonkey on Wednesday September 04 2019, @05:35PM

        by DeathMonkey (1380) on Wednesday September 04 2019, @05:35PM (#889600) Journal

        Sure they do! It's just that those crazy Europeans are referring to a game that involves kicking a ball around with their feet!