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Belgium: Racist murderer linked to Flemish nationalists
By Paul Bond
21 June 2006
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Some 20,000 people, many wearing white armbands, joined a march
against racism in Belgiums second largest city, Antwerp,
last month. The march had been called following two recent attacks
in the city that left three people dead and another seriously
injured.
The murders have highlighted the growth of extreme right-wing
tendencies in Belgian politics. One of the murderers has direct
links to the far-right Flemish nationalist party Vlaams Belang
(Flemish InterestVB).
At the beginning of May, five skinheads beat up a black Frenchman
in the city of Bruges. He is still in a coma following the assault.
In Antwerp, 23-year-old Moroccan Mohamed Bouazza drowned in the
River Scheldt on the night of April 30 following an apparently
racist attack at a nightclub. In Brussels, earlier in the year,
a black man was attacked at a petrol station. The beating left
him partially blind and paralysed.
The incident that focused public concern took place on May
11 in Antwerp. Facing expulsion from his agricultural and biotechnological
college after he was caught smoking, 18-year-old Hans van Themsche
shaved his head and bought a Winchester rifle. He warned his fellow
students that he would commit suicide and take 10 immigrants (he
used the racist term makakken) with him, saying that
by doing so he would have...done something good. Dressing
himself in black, he left a note for his school friends and headed
for the city centre.
Once there, van Themsche started firing, deliberately targeting
immigrants. He shot and wounded Songul Koç, a young Turkish
woman wearing a headscarf, as she sat reading on a bench. She
is still in intensive care recovering from her injuries. He then
opened fire on a two-year-old white child and her Malian nanny.
Both Luna Drowart and Oulematou Niangadou were killed. Van Themsche
was then stopped by a plainclothes policeman. When he refused
to drop his weapon, the officer shot him, wounding him in the
stomach. He was charged with murder and attempted murder and is
presently in hospital under police guard. In his first statement
after his arrest, van Themsche said, That girl [Luna Drowart]
was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
After his arrest, van Themsche told prosecutors that he sympathised
with the extreme right side of Belgian politics. Although
not a member of VB, he grew up schooled in its racist politics.
His father, a local party leader, was a founding member of Vlaams
Blok (Flemish Bloc), the partys precursor. Van Themsches
Aunt Frieda is currently a VB MP in the Flemish regional government.
His grandfather was a member of the Waffen SS on the Eastern Front
during the Second World War.
VB, like the Vlaams Blok before it, is a far-right Flemish
nationalist party that calls for the separation of the economically
dominant Dutch-speaking north of Belgium from the rest of the
country. It argues that the 1830 Belgian state was artificial
and bases its proposed independent Flemish state on
linguistic identity. It also lays claim to the Belgian capital
Brussels, a French-speaking city in the centre of the Dutch-speaking
region.
It is the proponent of unbridled free-market capitalism, declaring
that the right of ownership and free enterprise...constitute
the foundation for economic development, employment and prosperity.
As such, VB opposes public expenditure, insists that responsibility
for social care lies with families and their social entourage,
and supports sweeping tax cuts.
The main planks of VBs programme have been opposition
to immigration and a repressive law-and-order policy. VB was forced
to change its name from Vlaams Blok two years ago in order to
avoid legal penalties after judges ruled it was an openly racist
party. The Blok had called for an end to new immigration and the
repatriation of North Africans. VB calls for repatriation of immigrants
who do not adapt to our values and morality, reserving
voting rights for Flemish citizens.
The party took 24 percent of the vote in regional elections
two years ago. In Antwerp itself, the Blok took 33 percent of
the vote in the 2000 local elections and is hoping to gain control
of the citys council in Octobers elections.
VB has attempted to distance itself from van Themsche and sought
to downplay his political background.
Chairman Frank Vanhecke told a party congress that nobody
has the right to hold [VB] morally responsible for the killings.
VBs Philippe van der Sande said that van Themsche was probably
mentally disturbed and the murders had no racist motives.
VB has even sought to exploit the crime to demand greater police
powers. Vanhecke, declaring the party was shocked
by the murders, demanded the heaviest possible penalty
against van Themsche. The party called on its members to participate
in the white march.
The victims families have expressed their anger at the
way in which VB has attempted to use the murders to appear respectable.
Calling on VB not to participate in the march, the families said
that VBs voters were implicated in the murders. Demonstrators
told the press that they were there to oppose VB. Mohamed Bouazzas
mother told the march that VB and its leader Filip Dewinter were
responsible for what had happened.
The white march, though, sought to channel popular
anger away from drawing any political conclusions about the roots
of the racist violence. As at similar marches in Belgium recently,
no placards were carried. The march followed two banners, reading
The sadness of Antwerp and Stop racism: Diversity
is reality.
The main parliamentary parties are using VBs politics
to justify their own rightward shift. Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt
denounced the murders as the result of a climate of intolerance,
but both the VLD and the Christian Democrats have adopted similar
language to VBs on immigration.
Since 1989, the main parliamentary parties have agreed to maintain
a cordon sanitaire around VB. This is now beginning to
change. In 2004, after VBs electoral success, Verhofstadt
called for opening dialogue with the party in order to expose
their weakness.
See Also:
Belgium: Teenagers murder
exploited for right-wing agenda
[8 May 2006]
Belgium: right-wing
Vlaams Blok benefits from hostility to government
[30 June 2004]
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