BFF-18, 19 Ruling from your home: Inside Australia’s micronations boom

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Ruling from your home: Inside Australia’s micronations boom

SYDNEY, July 13, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Lounging on a sofa in his flowing robes,
a gold crown resting on his snowy hair and a stuffed white toy tiger at his
feet, Paul Delprat looks every bit a monarch.

Delprat, 76, is the self-appointed Prince of the Principality of Wy, a
micronation consisting of his home in the north Sydney suburb of Mosman.

Micronations — entities that have proclaimed independence but are not
recognised by governments — have been declared around the world.

One of the latest is Asgardia, started by Russian scientist and businessman
Igor Ashurbeyli, who in late June declared himself leader of the utopian
“space nation”.

But the pseudo-states are particularly popular in Australia, with the
island continent home to the highest number in the world, about 35, out of an
estimated total of up to 200.

“For me, it’s a passion, it’s an art installation,” Delprat, a fine art
school principal, tells AFP as a large painting of himself decked out in full
regalia with his wife and children looms above his head.

“My favourite artist is Rembrandt, who loved dressing up. In a world where
we haven’t sorted out our differences, art is the international language…
the philosophy of Wy is live and let live and above all, laugh if you can.”

Delprat’s homemade kingdom, filled with monarchical and historical
paraphernalia, is, like some micronations, born out of a dispute with
authorities.

Blocked by the local council for more than a decade from building a
driveway, Delprat seceded from Mosman in 2004.

Instead of drawing the ire of authorities, he became a local celebrity —
even attracting adoring fans from Japan.

– Disdain for authority –

MORE/MR/1040 hrs

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The rise of micronations hasn’t just stemmed from the relaxed attitude of
Australian governments willing to tolerate the tiny fiefdoms as long as they
pay taxes.

Australians’ healthy disdain for authority — a source of national pride —
has also fuelled the phenomenon, says constitutional law professor George
Williams.

“In Australia, there’s a strong streak of people wanting to thumb their
noses at authority,” Williams of the University of NSW tells AFP.

“There is a bit of a larrikin (maverick) streak here, a sense that this can
be a bit of fun… and often they are hobbies that have got wildly out of
hand.”

Establishing a micronation is not without its hazards.

John Rudge, the Grand Duke of the Grand Duchy of Avram in Australia’s
southern island state of Tasmania, issued his own notes and coins in 1980
after writing a PhD thesis about setting up a central bank.

The government disputed his use of the word “bank” on the notes and took
him to court, although the case was eventually dismissed, Rudge tells AFP.

The country’s oldest micronation, the Principality of Hutt River, 500
kilometres (300 miles) north of Perth, was set up by Leonard Casley in 1970
after a row with the Western Australia state government over wheat quotas.

Prince Leonard, who owns some 75 square kilometres (29 square miles) of
farmland — an area larger than that of more than 20 bona fide states,
territories or dependencies — was last year ordered by a court to pay Aus$3
million (US$2.2 million) in taxes.

Even so, the property reportedly makes a tidy sum for the now-retired
prince — who handed over the reins to his youngest son Graeme last year —
as a tourist attraction.

– Message for real-world nations –

Other micronations use their realms to talk about good governance.

George Cruickshank, aka Emperor George II, established the Empire of
Atlantium as a teenager with his two cousins after being horrified by
“confrontational” attitudes during the Cold War.

The 51-year-old has built a government house, post office and even a
pyramid on a 0.76-square-kilometre patch of farmland 300 kilometres south of
Sydney.

He markets the empire on Airbnb as the only country in the world that
people can rent for just Aus$100 a night, and uses his fame to promote his
progressive, globalist agenda.

“The moment I put on medals and a sash and I become George II, Emperor of
Atlantium, suddenly the media is interested by what I have to say,”
Cruickshank, who runs a Facebook group for micronation leaders, tells AFP.

“I think the world generally is taking a temporary step backwards with this
nativism, localism, Trumpism, Brexit.

“Micronations offer a possibility to say, ‘Stop, take a step back, how
could things be made better than they are now?’.”

The concept of sovereignty has also been a source of contention for
Australia’s Aboriginal population.

The “First Nations”, whose cultures stretch back tens of thousands of
years, were driven off their lands when British settlers arrived in 1788.

Two micronations — the Murrawarri Republic straddling Queensland and New
South Wales states, and the Yidindji nation in Queensland — have sought
treaties with Australia that acknowledge their land rights.

“They’ve never agreed to be dispossessed from those lands. In fact, many
still reject the idea that the Australian nation was created on their lands,”
Williams says.

“They do often look at asserting their sovereignty through micronations and
the like, because they want a better and more just settlement for them and
into the future.”

BSS/AFP/MR/1040 hrs