Cape Argus

PATERNITY TEST FOR BELGIAN EX-KING

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THE Brussels appeals court has ordered the retired king of Belgium to take a DNA paternity test, overturnin­g an earlier ruling in a suit brought by 50-year-old artist Delphine Boel, pictured left.

Under the judgment, reported by Boel’s lawyers on Monday, King Albert II, pictured right, must take the test within three months or risk being presumed to be her father – although his lawyers could seek to challenge the court’s legal argument. The 84-year-old royal, who in 2013 abdicated in favour of his son Philippe after 20years on the throne, has contested Boel’s claim for more than a decade.

Court-ordered DNA tests have proved that she is not the daughter of Jacques Boel, scion of one of Belgium’s richest industrial dynasties.

There was no comment from the royal house. Boel’s lawyers said they were pleased with the “strong affirmatio­n of the principle of acting in the interests of the child” as she seeks legal confirmati­on of her identity. That identity became a topic of public debate after the publicatio­n in 1999 of a biography of Queen Paola, Albert’s Italian wife, which alleged that he had had a long extra-marital relationsh­ip from which a daughter was born in the 1960s.

Albert, who has no formal public role, has acknowledg­ed that he and Paola had marital difficulti­es. Their three children are all older than Boel. Next in line to the throne is 17-yearold Princess Elisabeth, daughter of Philippe and Queen Mathilde.

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