Haley Sweetland Edwards
It’s Complicated: 5 Puzzling International Borders
by Haley Sweetland Edwards - October 26, 2011 - 11:41 PM

Most of us think of international borders as invisible, but clear-cut lines: stand on one side, and you’re in one country; stand on the other, you’re in another country. But here’s a list of five international borders that, for one reason or another, are not quite that simple.

1. The Indian Exclave in Bangladesh That Contains a Bangladeshi Exclave (Which Contains Another Indian Territory)

The Cooch-Behar District, nestled between Bangladesh and India, is one of the most confusing border zones in the world, with 102 mini-exclaves belonging to India splattered on the Bangladeshi side of the border, and 71 exclaves belonging to Bangladesh peppering the Indian side. To further confuse things, inside many of those exclaves, there are other, even smaller exclaves belonging to the other country.

For example, take the Indian region of Balapara Khagrabari. It’s an Indian exclave on the Bangladeshi side of the border, and contains inside of it, a Bangladeshi exclave, which, in turn, contains yet another Indian territory—like a doughnut inside of a doughnut inside of a doughnut. In Bangladesh. Or in non-pastry terms: Balapara Khagrabari is the only place in the world where an exclave contains another exclave that contains yet another exclave.

So why’d the border get drawn like that? It can all be traced back to power struggles between local kings hundreds of years ago, who would try to claim pockets of land inside each other’s territories as a way to leverage political power. When Bangladesh became independent from India in 1947 (as East Pakistan until 1971), all those separate pockets of land were divvied up. Hence the polka-dotted mess.

As of last month, the Indian and Bangladeshi governments signed a treaty that will get rid of all the exclaves soon, draw a nice clean line between the countries, and allow people living within the enclaves to choose which nationality they’d like to have.

2. Closing Time at the Dutch-Belgian Border

Image credit: Jérôme

Any border buff worth his salt will tell you about the little town of Baarle, which straddles the Dutch-Belgian border. The Belgian portion of town, known as Baarle Hertog, is not so much a hunk of territory as a smattering of tiny exclaves inside of the Netherlands town of Baarle-Nassau. As in Cooch-Behar, many of those Belgian exclaves also contain Dutch exclaves, making a map of the whole town look like one of Jackson Pollock’s crazier designs.

The official border between Belgium and the Netherlands runs through living rooms, yards and cafés, so it’s possible – indeed, it happens more often than you’d think – to sit across a table having a cup of coffee with someone who is actually in a different country.

For a while, a Dutch law requiring dining establishments to close earlier than they did in Belgium laid the foundation for an absurd, nightly charade in some Baarle restaurants. At closing time in the Netherlands, patrons would have to get up and move tables, over to the Belgian side. Like in Cooch-Behar, Baarle’s complex borderline has to do with how regional lords and dukes divided up their land hundreds of years ago.

3. The Little Hunk of Land That Nobody Wants

In 1899, when the British Empire controlled Egypt and Sudan, the Brits drew a little map. They said that Sudan would get all the stuff south of the 22nd parallel, while Egypt would get all the stuff north it. It would have been simple enough, except three years later, a different group of Brits drew a different map, which mostly followed the 22nd parallel, but not exactly.

The 1902 map gave Sudan an extra chunk of fertile territory, known as the Hala’ib Triangle, north of the 22nd parallel, while allotting the Egyptians a rather useless chunk of desert, known as Bir Tawil, south of the parallel. One hundred and ten years later, the border is still in dispute.

Not shockingly, the Egyptians insist the 1899 map shows the “real” borders, while the Sudanese say the 1902 map is more accurate. Both countries claim the fertile Hala’ib Triangle, while neither country—or anyone else, for that matter—claims the Bir Tawil.

4. The American Town That’s Really in Canada

In 1787, the Treaty of Paris basically laid out which British territories would go to the freshly victorious American rebels, and which would remain part of British Canada. The treaty said that the Americans would get all the British territory “through the Lake of the Woods, to the northwestern most point thereof, and from thence on a due west course to the river Mississippi…” The only problem was, the map they were using wasn’t quite right.

They didn’t know at the time that the source of the Mississippi was actually farther south, so if you follow their instructions to a T, you get this funny, 123 square mile blip of Minnesota up in the middle of Canadian territory, which still exists today. It’s called the “Northwest Angle,” and can only be accessed from the U.S. by land by crossing into Canadian territory first.

The citizens of the tiny Angle Township must check in via videophone to the Canadian customs authorities when they want to leave their village, and with the American customs authorities when they want to come back.

5. The Island Where You Can See the Future

There are two islands — known as the Diomedes, about two and a half miles apart — right smack in the middle of the Bering Straight. One of them, Little Diomede, belongs to the U.S., and has a hardcore, weather-bitten population of about 150. The other island, Big Diomede, belongs to Russia and is uninhabited. The space between these two islands marks not only an international border, but the International Date Line as well, making it possible for the folks on Little Diomede to wake up on a Sunday, pour themselves a cup of coffee, and peer across the water to Big Diomede, where it’s already Monday.

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Comments (22)
  1. Kind of surprised Port Roberts didn’t make the list.

  2. Trying to comprehend the first two made my head hurt.

  3. Monty Python’s Michael Palin started his excellent 1995 travel series “Full Circle” at the Diomedes, en route to circumnavigating the Pacific Ocean. Several years later, of course, an unrelated politician with the same last name referred to them in an infamous interview.

  4. “a Dutch law requiring dining establishments to close earlier than they did in the Netherlands”

    i think the Netherlands should be replaced with Belgium [Note: Right you are, Brandon. Thanks!]

  5. Point Roberts, John. Everyone – ZIP code 98281. Pretty interesting.

  6. @Patrick A look on Google Maps explains it all, really…

    http://maps.google.nl/maps?q=baarle+nassau+maps&ll=51.439136,4.939642&spn=0.040769,0.111494&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&hnear=Baarle-Nassau,+Noord-Brabant&gl=nl&t=m&z=14&vpsrc=6

  7. I was expecting to see the Haskell Free Library and Opera House in Vermont on this list. The building straddles the US/Canadian border.

  8. @JohnC & @Daniel – Yeah! Point Roberts, Washington!! Very similar situation to #4 here – but absolutely beautiful location – and they have an actual border station that you have to go through either way.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Roberts,_Washington

  9. Two towns in Virginia are shared with other states: Bristol and Bluefield.

  10. It’s not international borders, but one can only access the town of Kaskaskia, Illinois, a former state capital, by taking a bridge from Missouri. Apparently the flow of the Mississippi changed over the years.

  11. Bangladesh was not an independent country in 1947. After Indian partition, Bangladesh was a part of Pakistan, known then as East Pakistan. After a civil war between East and West Pakistan in the 70s did Bangladesh emerge as its own country.

  12. Derby Line, VT is similar to #2. It even has a library purposely built on the border so that both countries could use it:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haskell_Free_Library_and_Opera_House

  13. Ditto on Point Roberts. When I read the title for #4 that’s what I was expecting.

  14. Wow, there’s a bunch of irregularities in the USA: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_irregularities_of_the_United_States

  15. Hyder Alaska (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyder,_Alaska) is another anomaly. It’s on the Alaska panhandle but only accessible from Canada (via Stewart BC). The road crosses the (unguarded on the US side) border, then, about 30 km further on, after turning into a gravel logging road, recrosses the border back into Canada. (This crossing is merely marked with a small metal obelisk.)

  16. What about the UN border that splits the island of Cyprus in two with land mines in the middle of it?

  17. Great article, but it would have been so much better with maps! :-)

  18. The world owes all its onward impulses to men ill at ease. The happy man inevitably confines himself within ancient limits.

  19. The local national guard base is in my hometown of St. Joseph, MO. But, in order to get there, you have to cross over into Kansas and then back into Missouri. Kind of strange, but I think it has to do with the flood we had in 1993.

  20. There is a Lacock in England, which stand in for Godric’s Hollow in the Harry Potter books, and which was the village of Meryton in the 1995 BBC version of Pride and Prejudice.

    I’ve been to Katz’s Deli in NYC, where the famous “fake orgasm” scene from When Harry Met Sally took place. They even have a arrow pointing out the booth where Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan were sitting.

    Also, “Cocoon” was filmed in St. Petersburg, Florida. A park shown in the movie was my favorite playground as a girl.

  21. Yep, Point Roberts, WA SHOULD have been on that list.

  22. ….and don’t forget Beebee Quebec, where people have their house in Canada, and their backyards in the US!!!

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