Unification of Saint Martin

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The "Unity Flag" of Saint Martin, used in both halves of the island
Map of the island of Saint Martin. In Orange is the Dutch half of the island (Sint Maarten) and on green is the French one (the Collectivity of Saint Martin).

The unification of Saint Martin (Dutch: Eenwording van Sint Maarten; French: Unification de Saint-Martin) is the proposed unification of the small island of Saint Martin, located in the Caribbean Sea. Currently, it is divided into Sint Maarten (the southern half of the island, part of the Netherlands) and the Collectivity of Saint Martin (the northern half of the island, part of France). The island is divided since the signal of the Treaty of Concordia in 1648, which today remains as one of the oldest treaties still in effect. Unification of the island enjoys support from the population of both halves.[1][2]

The Treaty of Concordia allows freedom of movement between both parts of the island, which has promoted a common sentiment among the island's inhabitants, although this is also the reason why some see a formal unification as unnecessary. Other arguments against unification of the island are that neither France nor the Netherlands would allow it and that both sides would require full independence to achieve it.[1]

On 31 August 1990, the "Unity Flag" of Saint Martin was adopted at the Preliminary Conference on National Symbols at the Philipsburg Jubilee Library, in Sint Maarten. This flag was created to represent the people of both halves of the island and the unification of the latter, and is hoisted today on some houses and sometimes by churches and religious groups in Saint Martin.[3] In August 2020, when restrictions and controls were added to the Saint Martin–Sint Maarten border to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, some protesters against these measures flew this flag with them.[4] In September 2020, these restrictions were lifted, and people from both sides of the island started chanting "One island, one people, one destiny".[5]

Some notable supporters of this movement include Albert Fleming, former leader of the Collectivity of Saint Martin, who in 2014 stated his support for the unification of the island.[6]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Badejo, Fabian Adekunle (25 December 2004). "The reunification of St. Martin: A pipe dream or an inevitable choice?". House of Nehesi Publishers.
  2. ^ Hoogers, Gerhard; Karapetian, Gohar (12 November 2020). "One island, two nations and a European Union: St. Martin". IACL-AIDC Blog.
  3. ^ "12th anniversary of St. Martin's "Unity Flag" observed Saturday on Conscious Lyrics; students raise money for unity bumper stickers". House of Nehesi Publishers. 29 August 2002.
  4. ^ Steel, Jenny (9 August 2020). "Protest at Saint Martin border: "you are basically blocking us from living"". Caribbean Network.
  5. ^ Letuvée, Florent (16 September 2020). "Frontière: L'unification qui fait la force? Pas que... Une victoire mais il reste la "crise" sanitaire à gérer". sxminfo.fr (in French).
  6. ^ "Former mayor Albert Fleming calls for unification of St. Martin north and south with the support of UP party candidate #5 Josianne Artsen". Saint Martin News Network. 1 August 2014.
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