Farmer moves border marker and accidentally makes Belgium bigger, France smaller

<p>The border was marked out by a stone marker which has been in place since 1819</p> (TF1)

The border was marked out by a stone marker which has been in place since 1819

(TF1)

A farmer in Belgium has accidentally moved a boundary marker between his country and France, thereby expanding Belgian territory by a few metres.

The man placed the stone, which has marked the border for more than 200 years, 2.29 metres into France after it got in the way of his tractor.

The slight boundary change was noticed several weeks ago by an amateur historian during a walk in the forest.

The farmer “also repositioned his fence on trees that belong to the wood of Bousignies”, according to Aurelie Welonek, the mayor of the French town Bousignies-sur-Roc.

The stone was first put there in 1819, before the 620-km (390-mile) border was officially established under the 1820 Treaty of Kortrijk.

David Lavaux, the mayor of the Belgian village Erquelinnes, said the farmer will have to move the stone back or could face criminal charges.

“We have no interest in expanding the town, or the country. He made Belgium bigger and France smaller. It’s not a good idea,” he told French TV channel TF1.

He added: “I was happy, my town was bigger. But the mayor of Bousignies-sur-Roc didn’t agree.

“If [the farmer] shows goodwill, he won’t have a problem, we will settle this issue amicably,” Lavaux said with a smile.

Ms Welonek agreed, telling newspaper La Voix du Nord: “We should be able to avoid a new border war.”

If the boundary stone is not returned to its usual spot, a Franco-Belgium commission could be established to determine the exact border.

The last commission of this kind took place more than 90 years ago, according to Mr Lavaux.

Read More

'Don't book foreign summer holidays yet', says Liz Truss

Senior Swiss diplomat plunges to her death from Iran tower

Europe opens up to tourism – but what exactly is the EU planning?