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Belgium: Teenagers murder exploited for right-wing agenda
By Paul Bond
8 May 2006
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The brutal murder of a Brussels teenager three weeks ago continues
to reverberate through Belgian politics. It has prompted the largest
demonstration in Belgium in the last 10 years while this week
a petition demanding greater public safety, signed by 255,000
people, was handed to Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt by friends
of the dead youth. A row has also broken out between the judiciary
and the Ministry of Justice over public criticisms made by the
minister.
The murder has also highlighted a political crisis over the
attitude towards migrant workers, with sections of the media stoking
racial tensions and the Liberal government using the crime to
justify a more aggressive law-and-order programme.
Seventeen-year old Joe van Holsbeeck was stopped by two youths
at Brussels Central station at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, April 12.
The station was already busy with commuters returning home. Having
asked directions, the youths then demanded his mp3 player. When
he refused, they stabbed him five times before running off. No
one on the station came to the aid of the dying man.
The attack was captured on closed circuit TV, images from which
were released by police one week after the killing. The youths
who committed the crime had dark skin and hair, prompting the
judiciary to declare that the culprits were North Africans.
For two weeks this was reported as fact in the Belgian press,
with sections of the media portraying the killing as part of a
Moroccan and Turkish crime wave across the capital. One journalist
wrote of the dominance of murdering, thieving and raping
Vikings from North Africa. When a cardinal blamed the murder
on materialism and indifference in Belgian society
another journalist disagreed, saying it had everything [to
do] with a group of North African youths terrorizing Brussels
and the indifference of the authorities to eradicate
this scourge.
In fact, the main suspects were not North Africans but two
Polish youths. The Brussels Federal Police formally apologised
for having made the misleading suggestion that the murderers were
Africans. Laurette Onkelinx, the minister of justice, demanded
that the Brussels judiciary also apologise for having stigmatised
an entire section of the population. Investigating
magistrates have refused, however, on the grounds that their initial
statements to the press were based on witness statements. In protest
the Brussels magistrates said that they would no longer be issuing
public statements.
This did not emerge until after Joe van Holsbeecks funeral,
and after a demonstration against senseless violence
called by Brussels MP Fouad Ahidar. The Silent March was attended
by some 80,000 people. The Belgian rail service NMBS-SNCB offered
discounted tickets to the demonstration from anywhere in the country.
Verhofstadt had called on politicians not to make political
capital out of the murder and requested MPs not to attend Joe
van Holsbeecks funeral or make public statements about it.
The government appealed for calm and serenity.
Whilst objecting to the scapegoating of Muslims, Imams in Brussels
called on their congregations to turn over any information they
might have to the police. A week after the murder, Said Dakkar
of the Brussels Association of Mosques announced, Those
who know [the killers] must ... make public their identity.
The Imams public declaration against violence was intended
to appease right-wing critics, but amounted to an admission of
collective guilt.
Similarly, Ahidar had called his demonstration against violence,
but said that van Holsbeecks murder stinks of racism.
He accused a growing group of criminal Moroccan and Turkish
youths of going after victims who look like infidels.
Ahidar was not alone in promoting this line. Senator Jean-Marie
Dedecker, from Verhofstadts own Flemish Liberal Party (VLD),
was censured by the government because of his comments in the
Flemish daily De Standaard. In an op-ed piece, Dedecker
wrote that the police look the other way in order to avoid
being accused of racism but that they behave in exactly
the opposite way when they suspect decent citizens of some misdemeanour.
When Verhofstadt accused him of inciting hostilities,
Dedecker explained that he felt that this position was the only
way of opposing Vlaams Belang (Flemish InterestVB), a right-wing
party calling for the secession of the economically dominant Dutch-speaking
north of the country. VB was previously Vlaams Blok (Flemish Bloc),
until judges ruled that that was an openly racist party. (Vlaams
Bloks programme included ending new immigration, and repatriating
north Africans). To avoid further legal penalties, the party changed
its name.
The VB has been able to secure over a quarter of the vote in
the Dutch-speaking region. It is stridently demagogic on questions
of law and order, playing up social anxieties to promote its economic
programme. Barely a week after the death of Joe van Holsbeeck,
Marc Joris, a VB councillor in East Flanders, declared, There
is no proof that societies are safer when citizens are not allowed
to carry arms. He said that Belgians arm themselves because
they do not feel protected by the police.
In essence, Dedeckers position is that the only way to
combat VB is by adopting its politics. Although Verhofstadt was
quick to move against the senator on this occasion, he has himself
previously called for dialogue with VB in order to expose their
simplistic weakness. In practice, this means taking
up a cross-party position on law and order dictated by extreme
right-wing elements.
In the aftermath of the Silent March a cabinet meeting discussed
measures to tackle youth crime. These involve ensuring that street
crime should always result in legal action, recruiting 250 additional
neighbourhood wardens and increasing police presence
in Belgian cities. Government ministers have also finally approved
plans for a new youth detention centre for 200 offenders. This
had been much debated over the last few years.
Joe van Holsbeecks friends and family have tried to prevent
his murder being portrayed in racial terms. Van Holsbeeck was
described as an anti-racist. When Polish Catholics in Brussels
held a special mass, Joes father said, They dont
have to apologise. Those two young men are guilty, not the Polish
people. One friend said Joe would have been horrified
if his death were to be exploited by a political party.
However the petition launched by his friends, whilst motivated
by a desire for public safety, will undoubtedly be used to justify
greater police powers.
When it was finally revealed that the arrested youth were Polish,
the racist backlash changed direction. Journalists suggested that
the suspects should have been deported in a clampdown on migrant
workers. One of the youth, awaiting extradition from Poland, had
worked renovating houses in Brussels with members of his family
before being drawn into drugs and crime. Working away from home,
often separated from their families, young workers face huge pressures.
As one Polish woman, quoted in De Standaard, put
it: Youth are the main victim of migration.
Belgium has a large number of migrant workers, many of whom
are unable to get papers and live a marginalised existence. May
1 in Brussels saw a demonstration of about 300 migrant workers
chanting, We are workers, give us papers. In many
cases they would face desperate conditions if they were deported,
but without papers their existence is equally hazardous.
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