Belgica Admin
Number of posts : 5604 Location : BELGIE - BELGIQUE - BELGIEN - BELGIUM Registration date : 2008-11-19
| Subject: BBC about the Belgian elections Sun Jun 13, 2010 10:29 pm | |
| The big majority of Belgians don't want this, but it happens. BBC News: Belgians vote in poll dominated by separatism
Page last updated at 10:28 GMT, Sunday, 13 June 2010 11:28 UK
The election has been dominated by the debate over Flemish separatism Belgium is holding parliamentary elections which could bring the country closer to a constitutional split.
The Flemish separatist party the New Flemish Alliance (NVA) is expected to do well in the vote.
Its leader Bart De Wever supports dividing the country in two, Dutch-speaking Flanders and French-speaking Wallonia.
However, a split bringing an end to Belgium would not happen immediately.
Belgian governments are required to be made up of a bi-lingual coalition, but this is the first federal election from which a party advocating the end of Belgium could emerge the outright winner.
Separate lives Belgium is in effect two separate communities held together by a bi-lingual political system.
Continue reading the main story Made up of Wallonia and Flanders 4 million French speakers in Wallonia 6.5 million Dutch speakers in Flanders 7.7 million voters Political debate dominated by linguistic disputes Debt-to-GDP ration expected to exceed 100% within next 12 months Language row looms over election Much of public and political life in Belgium is dominated by bitter debates around language and the allocation of public resources.
Government aid to poorer Wallonia, home to four million French speakers, has caused resentment among Belgium's 6.5 million Flemish majority, correspondents say.
Until now separatist parties have been on the fringes of political debate.
But Mr De Wever, 39, has pushed his party into to the mainstream over the last three years while the other parties have been locked in a political stalemate.
A new government will not be able to devolve power immediately because of Belgium's parliamentary system.
The poll is actually two separate elections, split along linguistic lines.
At least four parties are required to form a government.
The country also faces economic problems.
During the last three years the national debt has grown to unmanageable proportions.
The country's ratio of debt to gross domestic product is behind only Greece and Italy in the Eurozone, analysts say.
Voting is mandatory in Belgium, and some 7.7 million voters will cast their ballots at 10,630 voting stations.
The election was brought forward by a year after the coalition led by Christian Democrat Yves Leterme collapsed in April over a long-standing dispute about voting rights for Dutch-speakers around Brussels. | |
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Patrick9310
Number of posts : 74 Location : Belgie Registration date : 2008-12-04
| Subject: Separatisme is een waals effect Mon Jun 14, 2010 1:45 am | |
| Het separatisme is een waals/franstalig effect. Franstaligen wilden (en nug nog steeds) niets te maken hebben met de nederlandstaligen en wilden aansluiten tot frankrijk en het hele land verfransen. Uit protest is de vlaming beginnen terugvechten.
Conclusie: franstaligen zijn de echte separatisten
De franstaligen hebben deze historische waarheid steeds verdoezeld en aan de internationale wereld laten uitschijnen dat vlaanderen separatistisch is. How low can you go???
Het bijeenroepen van de internationale pers is een fenomenale zet van NVA en is een eerste stap om de internationale pers te laten inzien hoe arrogant en separatistisch franstalig belige is!! | |
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