Protesters across Belgium staged a “chips revolution” on Thursday to demand a government as the country took over Iraq’s dubious record for the world’s longest political crisis of recent times.
In Brussels, Ghent and Leuven, some 5,000 youths took to the streets, organizers said, lining up for warm packs of free Belgian fries to honor a national dish under banners reading “Separatism: Not In Our Name — Youth.”
The nation of 11 million people hit 249 days of political deadlock as politicians from the Dutch-speaking north and French-speaking south squabble over a coalition government deal.
Photo: AFP
Caretaker Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme said on Flemish television that the record was “bad for our country’s image.”
In Ghent, youngsters, male and female, stripped to the bare essentials to demand a government.
“I’m taking my clothes off to send a signal to the politicians to do something,” history student Frea Van Craeynest, 20, said. “We gave them our votes, our trust. They must act!”
In chilly temperatures, her classmate Stien Van Vytvenet, 19, added: “Flemish and Walloon student have the same bodies. We’ve had enough.”
Already Europe’s longest wait for a government — beating the Netherlands in 1977 at 208 days — Belgium has now out-performed Iraq, where Kurds and Shiite and Sunni Muslims struck a political pact late last year after 249 days, which in December, 40 days later, saw a government sworn in.
The Belgian press marked the event with brio, the leading daily in Dutch-speaking Flanders, De Standaard, using a soccer analogy under the headline “At last, world champions!”
A new government for Belgium is not even on the horizon more than eight months after a June vote failed to produce an outright winner.
As fears mount of a lasting divorce between the two sides, figurehead sovereign King Albert II has named a succession of special envoys to bridge the gulf but all efforts have floundered.
“We saw what happened in Tunisia and Egypt,” 24-year-old architecture student Kliment Kostadinov said. “We are also trying to stage a positive revolution.”
He and other organizers of Thursday’s “unity” protests are hoping the “chips revolution” by youngsters from across Belgium’s language and political divide will help stave off Belgium’s break-up.
“We all face the same problems, whether we’re Flemish or French-speaking,” said Gunter Kathagen, 23, standing by a banner reading “Belgium=1” in Leuven.
At stake is a deal to reform Belgium’s federal system, giving more autonomy to each of its regions — Flanders in the north, French-speaking Wallonia in the south, and the capital Brussels, a bilingual enclave in Flanders.
About 20 supporters of the far-right Flemish independence party Vlaams Belang, whose slogan is “Belgium, Die!”, showed up at the Ghent party where they were outnumbered by several thousand people in the city square.
“We have a solution for the problem, they’re just laughing at the problem,” Johan Deckmyn, a Vlaams Belang member of the Flemish parliament, said as he pointed to the crowd. “We came here to tell them the solution is an independent Flanders.”
The king asked his current go-between, Belgian Finance Minister Didier Reynders, to report back on progress by March 1 in getting the politicians around the negotiating table.
Harvard academic Robert Mnookin said Belgium might need to bring in an international negotiator.
“The political system is such that two peoples cohabit separately there,” Mnookin told L’Echo daily. “Can the country break up? Yes that might be the case in the next decade.”
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