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WSWS : News
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Belgian TV hoax exposes political tensions
By Paul Bond
29 December 2006
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La Une, the first channel of Belgiums francophone
public broadcaster RTBF, interrupted regular programmes earlier
this month to announce that Flanders, the Dutch-speaking north
of the country, had unilaterally declared its independence and
that Belgium had ceased to exist as a nation. The broadcast was
a hoax that had taken two years to prepare.
Reactions were immediate. The station received some 2,600 telephone
calls, and its website crashed under the weight of hits. The government
was inundated with calls from foreign embassies and international
news agencies. A poll of viewers suggested that 89 percent believed
the story when the two-hour broadcast began, with six percent
still believing it at the end (after disclaimers had been running
for over an hour). The daily Le Soir ran a headline the
following morning Belgium died last night, while Fridays
De Standaard posed The end of Belgium?
In the programme, RTBFs journalists discussed the division
of the country into two with academics and Flemish politicians,
including Speaker of the Chamber of Representatives Herman Ducroo
(a member of Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadts Flemish Liberal
Party VLD). Prominent Flemish senator Jean-Marie Dedecker, another
VLD member, was quoted as saying, My ultimate dream has
been realised. Grainy footage apparently showed the King
leaving on the first available air force plane for Kinshasa, while
jubilant Flemish crowds waved flags and danced in the streets.
From the outset RTBF broadcast on screen a telephone number
for concerned viewers to call. They then began to broadcast a
message that This is perhaps not a fiction. This has
been defended as an echo of the Belgian surrealist René
Magrittes picture This is not a pipe. After
40 minutes, at the insistence of francophone Minister for Media
Affairs Fadila Laanan, the station broadcast the message, This
is fiction, on screen.
RTBF has defended the broadcast, saying it wanted to provoke
debate on Belgiums future ahead of next years general
election. Yves Thiran, RTBFs head of news, told the BBC
that their intention was to show Belgian viewers the intensity
of the issue of the future of Belgium and the real possibility
of Belgium no longer being a country in a few months. Thiran
said that it showed the importance of a topical political
debate. He defended the broadcast for having extended the
debate beyond academic and political circles.
Much of Belgiums political establishment has expressed
anger at the broadcast, turning their attention mostly to the
journalists and executives of RTBF. Verhofstadt described the
broadcast as a misplaced joke. His spokesman Didier
Seeuws called it very bad Orson Welles. The monarchy
described the depiction of their hasty flight as in bad
taste.
Yves Leterme, the Flemish premier, called Alain Gerlache, RTBFs
TV Director and a former spokesman for Verhofstadt, irresponsible.
Fadila Laanan questioned the ethics of the journalists involved,
and has indicated that RTBF could face consequences. In particular
she has called for RTBFs CEO Jean-Paul Philippot to be held
accountable. National Foreign Minister Karel de Gucht, though,
attempted to play down the commotion, saying the broadcast was
completely fake and describing it as no big
deal.
Responses to the hoax have revealed the sharp tensions within
official Belgian politics. RTBF spokesman Bruno de Blander said,
We think the question of the future of Belgium is in the
minds of our viewers. A poll conducted last week for Questions
a la Une (the programme interrupted by the hoax) suggested
that 58 percent of Belgians believe that Belgium will not change
much. Only 15 percent of those polled believed that Belgium would
eventually cease to exist. Half of these believed that separation
will take place within 15 to 20 years. One commentator in the
paper Libre Belgique wrote that the programmes condemnation
by most Belgians suggests that Belgium is more united than divided.
Considerably more of those polled by RTBF, though, (27 percent)
believe that greater independence for the regions is likely. It
is this tension, which has driven the political responses to the
RTBF broadcast. Although the programme focused on the fears of
Flemish nationalism, regionalists on both sides of the language
divide have sought to use it to justify their own posturing within
the federal structure of Belgium.
In French-speaking Wallonie in the south of the country, Finance
Minister Didier Reynders of the liberal Reform Movement (MR) criticised
the programme as irresponsible. His concern was that
the broadcast totally discredits an institution that the
French community has put a lot of investment into. Elio
Di Rupo, leader of the francophone Socialist Party (PS), said
that he had never seen such worry in his political life before.
Joelle Milquet, leader of Wallonies Christian Democrats
(CDH), said that the future of the country should not be a game.
Initially, Di Rupo said that the programme was irresponsible
and anti-social at a period when our country is rocked
by separatist leanings. Reynders seemed to distance himself
from the Socialist Party, issuing a press release in which he
called on Wallonie to get rid of its old demons. Di
Rupos response was to accuse the MR leader of giving arguments
to the opponents of the French-speaking front. Milquet
then threatened to boycott a forthcoming meeting of the three
parties unless Di Rupo and Reynders reached a truce. Their only
priority, she said, must be to work together to improve
the lives of Walloons.
The francophone parties have been able to exploit the programme
in this way because all of the media attention on right-wing nationalist
agendas in Belgium is focused on Flemish nationalism. Certainly
one of the few expressions of support for the programme came from
the xenophobic, anti-immigrant Vlaams Belang (VBFlemish
Interest, which was formerly known as Vlaams Blok).
VBs Filip Dewinter offered his congratulations to RTBF
for their daring show, arguing that it supported VBs
perspective of Flemish independence. The show, he said, caused
a shock in Wallonie where they come to the conclusion that the
scenario of Flemish independence is no longer utopia. Thanks
to the broadcast, he said, VB can speak publicly about the
independence of Flanders and Wallonie.
Other Flemish politicians have also sought to utilize the programme
for their own ends. Leterme, calling the programme abhorrent
and a caricature of Flanders, said that francophones
lump together separatist demands with Flemish calls for greater
regional powers of governance. In fact, the re-negotiation of
federal powers over the last 30 years, extending regional control
of taxation and education, as well as cultural matters, has sought
to appease separatist demands by ceding ground to nationalism.
Many of the other Flemish parties have tail-ended VB, which
won about a quarter of the regional vote two years ago. One of
Letermes parliamentary allies, Bart de Wever of the moderate
nationalist N-VA, has said that independence of the two regions
is a step closer every day.
For the early part of its short history, Belgium was officially
a French-speaking country, following the revolution of 1830 during
which sections of the Brussels middle class were able to unite
the whole country (French and Dutch speaking) against their Dutch
rulers. The countrys wealth was concentrated in the capital
Brussels (a francophone enclave in the predominantly Dutch-speaking
province of Brabant) and Walloon heavy industry. Flanders was
until recently largely agricultural, and was marginalized by the
francophone bourgeoisie. Jean-Marie Dedeckers comment on
the broadcast that After 175 years, we are finally free
of the royal family was addressed to their position as francophones,
not as a monarchy.
Since the early 1960s and the collapse of industry in the Walloon
region, particularly steel and coal, Flanders has developed rapidly
as a centre of new technologies. It is now the more affluent part
of the country, with a per capita GDP roughly 10 percent higher
than that of the south. Disputes on regional autonomy have largely
focused on whether Flanders should support Wallonie by taxation.
For all that they appeal tothe historical impoverishment
of the region, and the discrimination against it by sections of
the francophone ruling classthe Flemish nationalists are
seeking to preserve this dominant economic position. VB are the
most explicit about this, writing on their website, For
many decades the free-market-oriented Flemish have been subsidizing
Socialist-dominated Wallonie. Their determination to end
social welfare expenditure is a platform for an assault on the
living conditions of the entire working class.
The RTBF hoax has exposed how deeply the political tensions
run within Belgium, and the impossibility of resolving them under
the present system. It has emphasized the necessity of a socialist
strategy, which will unite all Belgian workersFrench, Dutch,
and German-speaking alikewith their class brothers and sisters
internationally.
See Also:
Sellout at Brussels Volkswagen plant
[20 December 2006]
Belgium: Losses for ruling
coalition as far right make gains
[23 October 2006]
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