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A crew from the North American Boundary Commission building a mound marking the border between Canada and the USA in August or September 1873. (CP Photo/National Archives of Canada C-073304)
INDEPTH: IT'S A FINE LINE
Disputing boundaries
CBC News Online | Oct. 11, 2005


As far as border disputes go, this one’s pretty lame. No green line separating antagonists, no Demilitarized Zones and no patriots dashing past guard posts to plant flags in a desperate attempt to reclaim land seized by invading armies.

Yet, every once in a while, someone will stop by a frozen hunk of rock about 1,100 kilometres south of the North Pole between Greenland and Ellesmere Island and leave either a Canadian or Danish flag and bury either a bottle of rye or a bottle of brandy – and claim the 1.3-square-kilometre Hans Island for either Canada or Denmark.

In mid-July 2005, Defence Minister Bill Graham stopped by Hans Island to keep the ritual going.

"Our view is that it's part of Canada and we continue to be there, to go there, the Danes go there as well and we are making sure that the Danes know that this is part of the Canadian territory," Graham said after he had safely returned from his excursion. He had taken a few hours out of his visit to a Canadian military base on the northern tip of Ellesmere Island to bring Hans Island back into the Canadian fold.

“It’s a part of Canada. I’m really glad I went there,” Graham told CBC News.

The Danes were not amused and let Canada’s officials in Copenhagen know about it. But there will be no Viking invasion.

Peter Taksoe-Jensen, speaking for Denmark's Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Copenhagen, says for years Canada and Denmark have agreed to disagree over the island and he sees it as a friendly dispute.

"Basically we have reacted because we want to keep the status quo ... if we didn't react to a situation we would risk to have a worse negotiating position."

The dispute dates back to 1973. Canada and Denmark agreed to create a border through Nares Strait, halfway between Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory, and Canada's Ellesmere Island. But they couldn’t agree which country would control the real estate on Hans Island and various other Arctic islands in the area. They decided to deal with that issue later.

Canada's Foreign Affairs Minister, Pierre Pettigrew, and his Danish counterpart, Per Stig Moller met in New York on Sept. 19, 2005 and agreed on a process to resolve the dispute. After the meeting, Pettigrew reiterated that Canada has sovereignty over Hans Island.

Canadian Forces troops raise the Maple Leaf on Hans Island on July 13, 2005. (CP Photo/DND/Cpl David McCord)
Considering the length of Canada’s international borders, there are very few disputes keeping diplomats busy these days.

There are only four other disagreements over where to draw the line – and they’re all with the United States, which shares almost 8,900 kilometres of border with Canada.

They are:

Machias Seal Island.
Yet another hunk of treeless rock that sits between the Bay of Fundy and the Gulf of Maine near Grand Manan Island, New Brunswick and Cutler, Maine. When the federal government replaced most lighthouse keepers on the east coast with automated devices, it left the lighthouse on Machias Seal Island under the watchful eye of a living, breathing lighthouse keeper. Fishery workers on both sides of the border are interested in the area because lobsters seem to like it.

The Beaufort Sea

This dispute is a little more serious. Canada and the U.S. disagree over who has sovereignty over a chunk of this northern sea between Yukon and Alaska. It’s what’s under the water that has piqued the interest of both sides: oil and gas. The U.S. has expressed it desire to increase oil and gas exploration along Alaska’s northeast coast.

Dixon Entrance

The Dixon Entrance is a strait between B.C. and Alaska that’s about 80 kilometres long and wide. It lies between the Clarence Strait in Alaska to the north, and the Hecate Strait into the Queen Charlotte Islands in B.C. to the south.

The Dixon Entrance is the principal approach to the port of Prince Rupert, B.C.

Strait of Juan de Fuca

This body of water connects Puget Sound to the Pacific Ocean between Vancouver Island and the Olympic Peninsula, Wash. Frequent ferry service between Port Angeles, Washington and Victoria crosses the strait.

One of the most contentious disputes between Canada and the U.S. in recent years has been over the Northwest Passage. The passage connects the Atlantic and the Pacific through the Canadian Arctic.

Canada claimed sovereignty over the water around its northern islands. In 1985, the United States sent an icebreaker through the passage without asking Canadian permission. Washington argued it didn’t have to because the route was through international waters.

The route can save cargo ships 4,000 kilometres in a trip between Europe and Asia – if the conditions are good. Global warming may make the passage an attractive route – some day.

There may have been more boundary disputes within Canada than between Canada and its international neighbours.

Quebec and Newfoundland have argued over the Gulf of St. Lawrence – and its potentially rich oil and gas reserves.

Newfoundland and Nova Scotia have done verbal battle over where to draw the line in the water between Cape Breton and Newfoundland. Again, oil and gas rights are at the centre of this dispute.

Prince Edward Island and Quebec have squabbled over fishing grounds between PEI and the Magdalene Islands. At issue is a lot of lobster.

And in the Northwest Territories, two native groups are arguing over land. The Akaitcho claim the Dogrib are claiming more of their sacred land.

Yet with all the disputes, one part of the country has learned to live with boundary lines as a fact of daily life. The border between Canada and the U.S. passes right though the heart of Rock Island, Quebec.

The boundary passes right through several buildings, splitting bedrooms, apartments, a library, a factory and even an opera house between Quebec and Vermont.





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