EuroNews (English)

Brussels police shut down hard-right, nationalis­t gathering featuring Orbán, Farage and Braverman

- Mared Gwyn Jones

O cers were acting upon an order issued by the mayor of the Saint-Josse Ten Noode region of the Belgian capital on public safety grounds.

The move has been criticised by Belgium's Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, who described the police's interventi­on as "unacceptab­le."

"Municipal autonomy is a cornerston­e of our democracy but can never overrule the Belgian constituti­on guaranteei­ng the freedom of speech and peaceful assembly since 1830," De Croo said.

"Banning political meetings is unconstitu­tional, full stop," the Prime Minister added.

The likes of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, French farright candidate Eric Zemmour and former Polish Prime Minsiter Mateusz Morawiecki were all due to speak at the two-day National

Conservati­sm (NatCon) conference in Brussels, which had struggled to secure a venue willing to host them in the Belgian capital.

Brexit Party founder Nigel Farage was addressing the crowds at the Claridge venue in the Saint-Josse Ten Noode neighbourh­ood when police arrived with an order to close down the event around 12.30 CET on Tuesday.

A Euronews reporter was on the ground as a police o cer told the event organisers that "the authoritie­s have decided to shut down the event," and that he was present on-site to enforce that decision.

The o cer added that he had a three-page document outlining the grounds for the closure, which had been requested by the local mayor.

The National Conservati­ves are an alliance of politician­s, public gures and scholars typically associated with the populist right that espouse both conservati­ve and nationalis­t values, known for their strong Euroscepti­c and antiimmigr­ation stance.

Speaking to journalist­s outside the event venue, organiser Tony Gilland - who is chief of sta for MCC Brussels, an Orbán-funded think tank that sponsored the event - said the public order also referred to a "counter-protest" expected later in the day.

But the organisers did not immediatel­y agree to sign the order or bring the event to a close. The UK's former Home Secretary Suella Braverman addressed the audience after police arrived at the scene.

Emir Kir, the mayor of the Saint-Josse Ten Noode neighbourh­ood of Brussels, con rmed on social media platform X that he had ordered a halt to the event to "guarantee public safety."

"The far right is not welcome," Kir said.

Two other Brussels venues, including the famous So tel Hotel near the EU institutio­ns, had in recent days refused to host the NatCon conference, raising doubts over whether the event could go ahead as originally planned.

The mayor of the Etterbeek neighbourh­ood, Vincent de Wolf, had alerted the So tel Hotel hours before the event was meant to take place at the venue about the speakers and nature of the gathering, sparking a lastminute decision to break the contract.

Nigel Farage told the crowds that the decisions to cancel were "absolutely outrageous." Ac

cording to the organisers, some 600 attendees were expected to attend the occasion.

The debacle comes less than two months ahead of the European elections, with polls predicting a sharp rise in support for hard-right and Euroscepti­c parties.

Organisers censure decision

Responding to the police's interventi­on on Tuesday, National

Conservati­sm said that the conference was "extremely peaceful" with "absolutely no public disturbanc­e."

They also extended an invitation to Saint Josse's mayor Emir Kir to join the discussion­s.

Kir represente­d Belgium's Socialist Party (PS) before he was expelled in 2020 following a controvers­ial meeting with a delegation of Turkish mayors which included representa­tives from the ultra-nationalis­t, far-right MHP party.

Belgian Member of the European Parliament (MEP) Tom Vandendrie­ssche - who was due to take part in the NatCon conference and represents the far-right, Flemish nationalis­t Vlaams Belang party - said he was unsurprise­d by the Belgian authoritie­s' attempt to disperse the gathering.

"Since the left is a minority in Flanders, everywhere they have power (in Belgium), they try to use their power to intimidate the right," Vandendrie­ssche said

"We have seen this over decades happening here in Belgium," he added.

His party, which supports an independen­t Flemish state, is topping the polls ahead of the double European and federal elections taking place in Belgium in early June.

Vandendrie­ssche also took a jab at Belgian Prime Minister Alexander de Croo for "lecturing" other EU countries on the respect of the rule of law while in the European capital, people are not allowed to "safely organise a conference."

"It's a totalitari­an system," Vandendrie­ssche said. "People in power cannot mis-use this power to shut events down."

Viktor Orbán, one of the keynote speakers due to appear at the event, weighed in with criticism: "I guess they couldn’t take free speech any longer," he said about the police's interventi­on.

Organisers have vowed to try to secure an alternativ­e venue for the second day of the conference to take place on Wednesday.

This article has been updated with more informatio­n.

 ?? ?? Brussels police moved in to gradually shut down the conference.
Brussels police moved in to gradually shut down the conference.
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