
“Gibraltar, a 2.6 square mile (6.7 square kilometre) peninsula that is home to about 30,000 people, is a British territory to which Spain has long laid claim. This week the old argument resurfaced as Spanish officials toughened border inspections, slowing traffic to a crawl, and Spain’s foreign minister threatened a €50 ($67) charge on crossings, to the alarm of locals on both sides of the border. The measures were apparently in response to the Gibraltar government’s decision to sink spiked concrete blocks into the sea to fend off Spanish fishermen, whom it accuses of poaching Gibraltarian fish.”
http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2013/08/economist-explains-4
Related posts:
Virginia judge sentenced to 30 days for growing 41 marijuana plants
Inside America's First Bitcoin-Friendly Gun Store
Concern over NSA privacy violations unites Democrats and Republicans, poll finds
Venezuela students protesting economy shot dead by gunmen
UberPOP halts service in France after clampdown, protests
Australia scraps plan to filter Internet
Edward Snowden’s travels overshadow his leaks in U.S. media
Canada to privatize its medical marijuana industry, ban personal growing
A Plan to Stop the Feds From Reading Your Emails
A Citizens Protest Movement Builds in Kuwait
The powerful countries that are buying up much of the world’s land
‘Creepy’ camera irks Platte City family
Fracking ban halts first shale gas project in Spain
US drugs prosecutors switch sides to defend accused Colombian traffickers
Jeffrey Tucker: The Abolition of the Playground