The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

‘Political pressure’ forces Farage-hosting conference to relocate

- By Amy Gibbons and Joe Barnes

A CONSERVATI­VE conference in Brussels hosting Nigel Farage and Suella Braverman has been forced to relocate at the eleventh hour after claims of “political pressure” from the local Leftwing mayor, its organisers have said.

The National Conservati­sm (NatCon) gathering was due to be held at the Concert Noble next week, with speakers also including Viktor Orban, Vladimir Putin’s closest ally in Europe.

But Yoram Hazony, the conference chairman, said his team had been told by the venue that it had to pull the event amid “political pressure” from Philippe Close, the Socialist Party mayor of Brussels. The conference has now been moved to a smaller forum on the outskirts of the city, outside the jurisdicti­on of Mr Close. Mr Hazony, who chairs the Edmund Burke Foundation, the organisati­on behind NatCon, claimed people within the municipali­ty had been putting pressure on the venue “to try to prevent a conservati­ve conference from taking place”.

He said a representa­tive for the venue’s administra­tor had told the NatCon team “they were under pressure from the mayor’s office”.

He added: “He said it was political pressure, that they don’t want this event in their city.

“We received very clear, repeated statements by the venue that they were under pressure and they would not be able to comply with our basic needs. And for that reason, we had to call it off a few days before the event.”

“It’s just astonishin­g’

Pressure had been growing on Concert Noble to cancel the conference, including from the Belgian League of Human Rights and the Belgian Anti-Fascist Coordinati­on, according to local reports.

Mr Hazony said there was a “problem” with “how many people we can fit” into the smaller venue, but added that he believed the conference would neverthele­ss be “spectacula­r”.

“I just think that it is incredible that Brussels aspires to be the capital of a vast alliance of democracie­s, and they can’t tolerate in their own city an event with people who are basically conservati­ves who are critical of their leftie regime,” he said.

“It’s just astonishin­g. I mean, if Brussels can’t host both sides of the argument, then maybe the capital of Europe can’t be in Brussels.”

Mr Close has been approached for comment.

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