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This remains 'smallest country in the world' after adventurer claims fort abandoned

When it comes to David and Goliath stories, the tug of war between the tiny micronation of Sealand and Great Britain is tough to beat.
Measuring around the size of two tennis courts, and located in the North Sea about 12km east of Suffolk, the oddity of Sealand claims to be the world's smallest country.
Since 1966, the Principality of Sealand has somehow repelled the clutches of its powerful neighbour, England, whose mighty empire was built on the back of awesome naval power and once covered a quarter of the planet's land mass.
Sealand
Despite their modest size, World War II servicemen lived on the forts, like Sealand, for more than a month at a time, working and sleeping in the hollowed out concrete pillars (Courtesy of Sealand)
After former British army major Roy Bates planted his flag on an old World War II sea fort nearly six decades ago, which he then established as Sealand, the English never managed to get him off, no matter how hard they tried.
"It was definitely a cock a snook to the British government," Roy's son Michael Bates tells 9news.com.au, tipping his hat to a lesser known name given to the derisive hand gesture where someone holds their thumb to the tip of the nose and waggles their fingers.
"It symbolises freedom, doesn't it?" he says, reflecting on what Sealand, and its colourful history, represents.
Before Michael's now deceased father claimed it as sovereign territory and anointed it Sealand, the hulking two-legged steel platform was simply known as HM Fort Roughs.
Built in 1943 to repel the Germans in World War II, around 150 Royal Navy personnel occupied the fort throughout the war to help defend vital shipping lanes.
The self-styled 'Principality of Sealand'
The self-styled 'Principality of Sealand' was founded on a metal platform the size of 2-3 tennis courts, perched on top of two concrete legs rising 20 metres above the sea. (Fairfax Archive)
The last navy man left the structure in 1956, and government put the fort on the backburner, leaving it to sit isolated and empty in some of the most unforgiving seas and weather patterns on the planet.
With the fort abandoned in international waters, outside of Britain's then legal reach of three nautical miles, Bates hatched a plan.
He had a bee in his bonnet, because the government had not long before booted him off another war fort in the North Sea, one called Knock John.
From Knock John, the self-styled renegade Bates had been operating a pirate radio station called Radio Essex, taking on the BBC.
Pirate stations were on the rise, and the UK government wasn't happy about it. Tough new legislation was drafted and officials sought to shut down stations like Radio Essex.
From left are Michael, Joan, Penny and Roy Bates, the British family who set up their own mini-nation in the North Sea
From left are Michael, Joan, Penny and Roy Bates, the British family who set up their own mini-nation in the North Sea (Fairfax Archive)
The Sealand fort. (Tankwart)
This steel and cement construction was a British World War II gun emplacement known as Rough's Tower. Now it goes by the fancier title the Principality of Sealand.
Knock John's Achilles heel, for Bates, had been its location. It was positioned in waters inside British jurisdiction, while Fort Roughs was further out to sea.
The other problem for Bates was a rival pirate radio station, Radio Caroline, was already occupying Fort Roughs.
The details of the night have varied a little over the years, but the way Michael Bates tells it to 9news.com.au from his home in Essex, the action took place on a "freezing cold" Christmas Eve in 1966.
Michael, his father and a couple of radio DJs jumped on a boat and journeyed out to Fort Roughs, pulling up underneath the platform.
"There was a little piece of rope hanging down and one of the DJs could climb really well," Michael Bates recalls.
"He climbed up and put a rope ladder down and we all climbed up.
"There were actually a couple of guys from Radio Caroline, we didn't know they we're going to be there, on the fort at the time. And we just told them, 'We're going to be taking you ashore tomorrow'.
"The world was a bit like that in those days, you know?"
The fort has been in Bates family hands since. But not without drama.
Over the next decade, Sealand battled to survive and protect its sovereignty in a string of incidents which only added to the intrigue and legend of the manmade island.
When the British navy sent a boat close by, Michael Bates fired a series of warning shots at it. That scrape ended with the long arm of the law hauling Roy and Michael before a court in England.
But a judge threw out the case, ruling Sealand was outside British territorial waters and therefore beyond the jurisdiction of the court.
The Bates' seized on the ruling, insisting it effectively recognised Sealand as its own state. And for the past 60 years, the Bates family has run Sealand as if it were a real country, even though it's never been officially recognised as such.
"My dad was a born adventurer," Michael Bates says. In summing up, Bates claimed the judge had said his father should have been born in the Elizabethan era, "you know, like in the days of Francis Drake".
After the court case, Bates senior went all in.
He created a Sealand flag, a national anthem and a motto - E mare libertas, which translates into: "From The Sea, Freedom".
There are Sealand coins and stamps. The principality has its own constitution, and currency, Sealand dollars, pegged to the US dollar. It even has its own national football team. Arriving at Sealand, your passport must be stamped, and your person may be searched.
The twin supporting towers which hold up the platform, and make Sealand a place to live, are divided into seven floors of bedrooms, living rooms and kitchens, and even a chapel and jail cell.
"When you're inside, it's nice and warm and it's fine," Bates says.
"You can hear the sea gurgling around you. You hear ships go past like those old war submarine films where they're all sitting there, waiting for the depth charges to land, and you hear the propellers of the destroyer going 'ding ding ding ding' as it runs by you.
"You hear all that."
Wild storms are an exhilarating experience, and unnerving for the uninitiated.
"Luckily it's built in a fashion that the seas roll around it," Bates says.
"But you get the odd bastard (wave) now and again that will run up the tower and slap underneath, when there's like a Force 12 storm."
There's been more than just the weather to worry about.
In 1978, an attempted coup by a group of German and Dutch mercenaries drew the attention of the BBC and The New York Times, with The Times calling it "the smallest coup d'etat in history".
Standing next to an old anti-aircraft gun which was left over from World War II, Roy Bates explains to his wife Joan how to use a handgun
Standing next to an old anti-aircraft gun which was left over from World War II, Roy Bates explains to his wife Joan how to use a handgun (Fairfax Archive)
The way Michael Bates tells it, he was the only one on the fort at the time. The would-be invaders flew in by helicopter and dropped down onto the fort, holding him captive for several days. He was marshalled onto a fishing trawler and put ashore in the Netherlands.
"Unfortunately they seem to have not really read their history about my father and my family," Bates says, matter of factly.
"So they didn't quite do the right thing."
After making his way back to the UK, the Bates clan launched their own armed counter offensive, flying back on a helicopter and retaking Sealand.
"We were sliding down ropes out of a helicopter, and we were 100 foot above the North Sea," Bates recalls.
"It was blowing a gale of wind, really rough, and we never even considered wearing large jackets. It's crazy when you look back."
Things are more serene these days.
After the turn of the millennium, Bates briefly flirted with the idea of setting up Sealand as the world's first truly offshore data storage platform, away from regular government and regulations.
But that initiative quickly fizzled out.
Now, the principality's website offers people the chance to purchase Sealandic titles, ranging from Lord or Lady, to a Duke or Duchess.
"They gave it a lifespan of 200 years when they built it," Bates says, when asked what the future holds.
"My sons are running it all now. I've got three grandsons.
"I'm sure we'll just carry on."
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