War of words at the heart of Europe
By Khaled Diab
The
collapse of talks to form a federal government is testing
September 2007
Negotiations to form a new coalition for the
Belgian federal government collapsed on Thursday, some 74 days after election day. The grey and uncharismatic Yves Leterme, the Flemish Christian Democrat prime minister-designate charged
with forming the government, requested from King Albert II that he find another formateur to replace him.
The premier-in-waiting’s
decision came shortly after crisis talks failed to shore up Flemish-Walloon
communitarian differences in the Christian Democrat-Liberal (Orange-Blue)
coalition-to-be. Although coalition building is a delicate and slow process in this
complex and fractured political landscape, the fall of the government before it
was even formed threatens to take
Accusations have been traded regarding who is
responsible for the crisis, with some blaming Leterme’s
inexperience, lack of consensus-building skills and polarising manner, while
others blamed strident members of the Francophone Christian Democrats. However, the stalemate seems too
broad to blame exclusively on one person or party.
The broad lines of contention had already been
drawn in June during one of
You may be excused for thinking that nothing
much happens in
So could divorce now be in the air?
Well, the Flemish far right are all for
separation. The anti-immigrant pro-independence Vlaams
Belang’s strongman Filip Dewinter has called on the Flemish
parliament to open the floor to discussions over independence. “
However, the quest for Flemish independence
comes up against an immediate brick wall: any unilateral declaration of independence
is unconstitutional, even if confirmed by a referendum. In addition, although
many Flemings may grumble about the relatively high tax burden they must bear
in order to prop up the faltering Walloon economy,
Another sticking point is multicultural But what would the consequences of a unilateral
declaration of independence be for Belgians and the wider
It is difficult to say what the effects would
be, since no in-depth socio-economic and political studies have been carried
out into the subject. In addition, it would depend on how and when such a
declaration occurred.
The Flemish in favour of splitting away hope
that a divorce would mean more of the fruits of their economic success would
stay at home. However, this overlooks several important factors. Is it really
in
Moreover, there is a lot to be said for the
wisdom of maintaining economic diversity. Prior to the second world war,
Flanders was the relatively less developed region of Belgium, but Flemish
multilingualism, versatility and focus on the service sector, hard sciences and
the modern knowledge economy turned around its fortunes in the post-war years.
But there is no reason to believe that this situation will last forever. A
forewarning of this was how
Economic winds change and future Walloons could
repay the relative Flemish largesse of today. Furthermore,
On the wider European stage, Flemish
independence would present the EU with an unprecedented dilemma. On the
symbolic level, it would appear paradoxical that a country that has been at the
forefront of European integration over the past half century has unravelled.
With the union already faltering under the weight of enlargement, eurosceptics would have a field day, conveniently ignoring
the fact that nearly all Belgians are in favour of the European project.
Although
Other EU member states may be hesitant to take
up the Flemish cause because they are no less an artificial construct than
Belgium and would fear that nationalist movements within their own borders
would be emboldened: the Scottish in the UK, the Basque in Spain, to mention
just two examples.
In short, it is in both communities’ own
long-term best interests to make the marriage work. As recent polls have shown,
neither community wants to be swallowed up by the
More importantly, the language divide leads
people to confuse linguistic diversity for cultural difference. As many of my
Belgian friends have observed, the Flemish and Walloons have more in common
with each other than with their language community across the border: they both
value pragmatism, modesty, privacy, understatement and egalitarianism. In
addition, they are perhaps the least patriotic and nationalistic people in
However, devolution is entrenching differences
and, in a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy, leading to divergence.
Administratively it makes sense but what we need are efforts to reconstruct a
common cultural identity, through, for example, bilingual schools and a
bilingual national media to rebuild mutual knowledge.
This column appeared
in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section on 24
August 2007. Read the related
discussion.
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