The Principality of Sealand () is an unrecognised micronation on HM Fort Roughs (also known as Roughs Tower), an offshore platform in the North Sea. It is situated on Rough Sands, a sandbar located approximately from the coast of Suffolk and from the coast of Essex. Roughs Tower is a Maunsell Sea Fort that was built by the British in international waters during World War II. Since 1967, the decommissioned Roughs Tower has been occupied and claimed as a sovereign state by the family and associates of Paddy Roy Bates. Bates seized Roughs Tower from a group of pirate radio broadcasters in 1967 with the intention of setting up his own station there. Bates and his associates have repelled incursions from vessels from rival pirate radio stations and the UK's Royal Navy using firearms and petrol bombs. In 1987, the United Kingdom extended its territorial waters from its previous 3 nautical miles to 12, which places the platform in British territory. As of August 2024, Sealand has only one permanent resident.
History
In 1943, during World War II, Roughs Tower was constructed by the United Kingdom as one of the Maunsell Forts, primarily to defend the vital shipping lanes in nearby estuaries against German mine-laying aircraft. It consisted of a floating pontoon base with a superstructure of two hollow towers joined by a deck upon which other structures could be added. The fort was towed to a position above the Rough Sands sandbar, where its base was deliberately flooded to sink it in place. This is approximately from the coast of Suffolk, outside the then claim of the United Kingdom and, therefore, in international waters at the time.
Occupation and establishment
Roughs Tower was occupied in February and August 1965 by Jack Moore and his daughter Jane, squatting on behalf of the pirate station Wonderful Radio London.
On 2 September 1967, the fort was occupied by Major Paddy Roy Bates, a British citizen and the owner of a pirate radio station, who ejected the competing group of pirate broadcasters. Bates intended to broadcast his pirate radio station—called Radio Essex—from the platform. Despite having the necessary equipment, he never began broadcasting. Bates declared the independence of Roughs Tower and deemed it the Principality of Sealand. The court ruled that the platform (which Bates was now calling Sealand) was outside British territorial limits, being beyond the limit which then applied to the country's waters. As a result, the case could not proceed as it was not within British jurisdiction. Bates considers this Sealand's first instance of de facto recognition.
1978 attempted coup by German mercenaries
In August 1978, Alexander Achenbach, who described himself as the Prime Minister of Sealand, hired several German and Dutch mercenaries to lead an attack on Sealand while Bates and his wife were in Austria, invited by Achenbach to discuss the sale of Sealand. They stormed the platform and took Bates's son, Michael Bates, hostage. Michael was able to retake Sealand and capture Achenbach and the mercenaries. Achenbach, a German lawyer who held a Sealand passport, was charged with treason against Sealand, and was held unless he paid DM 75,000 (more than US$35,000 or £23,000). Germany then sent a diplomat from its London embassy to Sealand to negotiate for Achenbach's release. Roy Bates relented after several weeks of negotiations and subsequently claimed that the diplomat's visit constituted de facto recognition of Sealand by Germany.
Following his repatriation, Achenbach and Gernot Pütz proclaimed a government in exile, sometimes known as the Sealand Rebel Government or Sealandic Rebel Government, in Germany. In 1997, the Bates family revoked all Sealand passports, including those that they themselves had issued over the previous 22 years, The ringleaders of the operation, based in Madrid but with ties to various groups in Germany—including to the rebel Sealand Government in exile established by Achenbach—had used fake Sealandic diplomatic passports and number plates. They were reported to have sold 4,000 fake Sealandic passports to Hong Kong citizens for an estimated $1,000 each.
2006 fire
thumb|Sealand several months after the fire
On the afternoon of 23 June 2006, the top platform of the Roughs Tower caught fire due to an electrical fault. A Royal Air Force rescue helicopter transferred one person to Ipswich Hospital, directly from the tower. The Harwich lifeboat stood by the Roughs Tower until a local fire tug extinguished the fire. All damage was repaired by November 2006.
Attempted sales
In January 2007, The Pirate Bay, an online index of digital content of entertainment media and software founded by the Swedish think tank , attempted to purchase Sealand after harsher copyright measures in Sweden forced them to look for a base of operations elsewhere. Between 2007 and 2010, Sealand was offered for sale through the Spanish estate company InmoNaranja, at an asking price of €750 million (£600 million, US$906 million), (approximately £985 million in 2024).
Death of founder
Roy Bates died at the age of 91 on 9 October 2012 after a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease several years earlier. His son Michael took over the operation of Sealand, although he continued to live in Suffolk, where he and his sons were operating a family fishing business called Fruits of the Sea. Joan Bates, Roy Bates's wife, died in an Essex nursing home at the age of 86 on 10 March 2016.
Legal status
thumb|Map of Sealand and the United Kingdom, with territorial water claims of shown.
In 1987, the UK extended its territorial waters from , bringing Sealand into British territorial waters. In the opinion of law academic John Gibson, there is little chance that Sealand would be recognised as a nation due to it being a man-made structure. In this role, he apparently served as Sealand's acting Head of State and also its Head of Government.
At a micronations conference hosted by the University of Sunderland in 2004, Sealand was represented by Michael Bates's son James. The facility is now occupied by one or more caretakers representing Michael Bates, who himself resides in Essex, England. The principality also sells noble titles on its online store, such as Lord and Baron.
Sports
thumb|The [[Sealand national football team with the Bates family]]
Sealand is nominal home to multiple sports teams, including an association football team and an American football club.
Sealand's national association football team was founded in 2003, initially being a team from Vestbjerg representing the micronation. In 2009, the team was revised with Neil Forsyth as manager. Following Forsyth, the team has been managed by Julian Dicks and Ed Stubbs. As of 2022, the club had men's, women's, and masters (players over 35) teams, and had over 200 players and staff. and Mount Everest. Additionally, athletes have represented Sealand in international kung fu and ultimate frisbee competitions.
Sealand itself has also been the site of skateboarding and a single-person half marathon. Richard Royal swam from Sealand to the British mainland in 2018, being recognised by the British Long Distance Swimming Association and the World Open Water Swimming Association in doing so.
See also
- Radio Newyork International
- Self-proclaimed monarchy
- The Battle of Sealand
References
Further reading
- Cogliati-Bantz, Vincent. "My Platform, My State: The Principality of Sealand in International Law" () (2012) 18 (3) Journal of International Maritime Law 227–250
- Connelly, Charlie. Attention All Shipping: A Journey Round the Shipping Forecast, Abacus, 2005. .
- Conroy, Matthew. "Note: Sealand – The Next New Haven?" Suffolk Transnational Law Review, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 127–152. Winter 2003. ISSN 1072-8546. Issue table of contents page ().
- Fogle, Ben. Offshore: In Search of an Island of My Own, Penguin Books, 2007. .
- Garfinkel, Simson. "Welcome to Sealand. Now Bugger Off" "). Wired. July 2000. Vol. 8.07.
- Gilmour, Kim. "Sealand: Wish You Were Here?" () Internet Magazine. August 2002.
- Goldsmith, Jack, & Wu, Tim. Who Controls the Internet?: Illusions of a Borderless World, 2006, .
- Grimmelmann, James. "Sealand, HavenCo, and the Rule of Law" (), March 2012, University of Illinois Law Review, Volume 2012, Number 2
- "License Plates of Sealand (Great Britain)". License plates of the world. Web. 28 December 2009.
- Menefee, Samuel Pyeatt. "Republics of the Reefs: Nation-Building on the Continental Shelf and in the World's Oceans". California Western International Law Journal, vol. 25, no. 1. Fall 1994.
- Miller, Marjorie, & Boudreaux, Richard. "A Nation for Friend and Faux". Los Angeles Times. 7 June 2000. p. A-1.
- Moss, Joanne (2021). Critical perspectives: North Sea offshore wind farms.: Oral histories, aesthetics and selected legal frameworks relating to the North Sea. Master's thesis. Uppsala University, Sweden. DiVA - Search result
- Slapper, Gary. "How a law-less 'data haven' is using law to protect itself". The Times. 8 August 2000. p. 3. A partial quotation of the article.
- Strauss, Erwin S. How to Start Your Own Country, 2nd ed. Port Townsend, WA: Breakout Productions, 1984. .
- Taylor-Lehman, Dylan (2020). Sealand: The True Story of the World's Most Stubborn Micronation and Its Eccentric Royal Family. Diversion Books. .
External links
- Official website
