LARGE RETAIL CENTRES, ROADS, AND WASTE MANAGEMENT FACILITIES WERE BLOCKADED
~ from Rapports De Force ~
“For the past 10 months, this mobilisation has been steadily growing,”
summarises Orville Pletschette, a trade unionist with the FGTB. From 24 to 26
November, the Belgian inter-union alliance (CSC Christian Democrats, FGTB
Socialists, and CGSLB Liberals) organised three days of strikes against the
reforms of the “Arizona government,” a coalition of parties ranging from the
centre-left—including the Flemish Socialist Party—to the far right.
“The strategy was to implement rotating strikes: transport on Monday, the public
sector on Tuesday, and the private sector on Wednesday. It’s one of the most
ambitious plans the inter-union group can aim for. It shows a desire to further
escalate the situation with the government as its target,” the union
representative continued. After a particularly successful demonstration in
October – 140,000 protesters in Brussels – the Belgian social movement is
raising its voice to deliver a snub to Prime Minister Bart De Wever.
Three days of rotating strikes
November 26th was the high point of the mobilisation. In the morning, pickets,
some of which were controlling access, were held in front of several companies
in the port of Ghent. The “red” union, FGTB, also counted around forty such
pickets in East Flanders, according to Belgian national news.
Large retail centres, roads, and waste management facilities were blockaded. In
Enghien, teachers and their students formed a human chain of over 2,000 people.
Postal services reported that four out of ten mail carriers were on strike,
flights at airports were mostly grounded or severely disrupted, and public
transportation, at the end of its three-day strike, remained disorganised for
some time. “At the Université Libre de Bruxelles, we had three days of
continuous blockades,” emphasised Orville Pletschette, a former student union
member with the FGTB youth wing.
The two previous days were also marked by strikes. On November 25, there was
significant mobilisation in municipal administrations, hospitals, administrative
offices, and day care centres. On November 24, a railway and public
transportation strike disrupted approximately half the trains on main lines,
even fewer during rush hour. In Belgium, a minimum service law prevents traffic
from being completely stopped, but these significant consequences for traffic
indicate that the movement has been supported.
Ten Months of Mobilisation
The Belgian social movement did not reach such a level of conflict in just a few
weeks. The mobilisation began more than ten months ago. It was a response to the
government agreement reached between the members of the governing coalition.
This agreement included a less favourable pension reform, an attack on
unemployment benefits and the integration allowance, and also targeted the
status of railway workers and casual workers.
The unions reacted quickly, and in February 2025, 100,000 demonstrators gathered
for a major protest in Brussels. In March, an inter-professional strike was
organised, and numerous regional and sectoral actions took place up until the
summer.
The mobilisation resumed with even greater intensity in the autumn, with a
demonstration that broke the February record and brought together 140,000 people
in the streets of Brussels on October 14, according to the union count. Belgian
police confirm this increase, announcing 80,000 demonstrators compared to 60,000
in February.
Pressure on the Governing Coalition
Since the beginning of the battle against the coalition, one of the social
movement’s strategies has been to put pressure on the Flemish socialist party,
Vooruit, a member of the governing coalition. On November 23, the coalition
nearly collapsed, and after complicated discussions among the five member
parties, an agreement outlining savings of €9.2 billion by 2029 was narrowly
reached.
While the Belgian right wing wanted to challenge the automatic indexation of
wages to inflation, a measure at the heart of Belgian social policy and a major
achievement of the trade union movement, this measure will ultimately only apply
to salaries above €4,000 gross per month. “The mobilisation has succeeded in
demonstrating that there is no political majority in the country to pass these
reforms,” Orville Pletschette continued.
Similarly, while the coalition hasn’t abandoned its reforms, it has postponed
some of them. For example, the government has failed to make any progress on its
pension reform. “This is mainly due to the fact that, unlike the issue of
unemployment insurance, workers across all professional, regional, and political
categories unanimously reject its proposal to raise the retirement age from
sixty-five to sixty-seven,” explains union leader Daniel Kopp to Jacobin
magazine.
Nevertheless, some reforms have been passed, such as limiting unemployment
insurance to two years. The question of building a more assertive social
movement has therefore been on the table for the past ten months.
With 1.5 million members in the FGTB, the same number in the CSC, and
approximately 300,000 in the liberal CGSLB, Belgium boasts a unionisation rate
of nearly 50%. While this rate is five times higher than many other European
countries multi-day strikes remain difficult to organise. This led some union
members, such as Mathieu Overhang of the FGTB, to campaign for longer strikes.
This has now been achieved.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Machine translation
The post Belgium: Mobilisation and strikes against far-right-led coalition
appeared first on Freedom News.
Tag - Belgium
MORE THAN 150,000 PEOPLE TOOK TO THE STREETS AGAINST BELGIUM’S “ARIZONA”
GOVERNMENT — A COALITION OF LIBERALS, CENTRISTS AND THE FAR RIGHT
~ From Stuut ~
On Tuesday, October 14, more than 150,000 people responded to the call to
demonstrate against the Arizona government in Brussels . The demonstration began
around 11 a.m. at the Gare du Nord and ended mid-afternoon at the Gare du Midi.
Throughout the route, there were clashes between protesters and law enforcement,
resulting in numerous incidents of police violence.
At least five people were reportedly arrested under judicial arrest and around
twenty under administrative arrest. Around ten people with serious injuries were
reportedly hospitalised.
Early in the morning, around 7 a.m., several roads in the capital were blocked
as part of the strike. Groups of protesters blocked the Brussels Inner Ring Road
and the capital’s inner ring road. These blockades paralysed a significant
portion of road traffic in the Brussels Region.
Other blockades and pickets took place, notably at the ULB , the INSAS film
school , and the Saint Pierre University Hospital . All denounce the anti-social
measures and job insecurity put in place by the current government.
The demonstration then took place in a very determined atmosphere against the
anti-social measures implemented by the Arizona government. Different blocs were
present: the bloc of workers in the cultural sector, education, services and
domestic help, the bloc of dockers, the bloc of lawyers, and the bloc of the
neutral zone collective. Everyone had come to express their anger at the
government’s measures to make society precarious.
Many demonstrators thus decided to target places of power such as the
Immigration Office, the headquarters of the Socialist Party, the headquarters of
the MR , the ONE M. (the National Employment Office), etc.
Around 11:30 a.m., shortly after departure, clashes with law enforcement
officers took place following the targeting of the Immigration Office. Slogans
were chanted in tribute to Mahmoud Ezzat Farag Allah, who died last Monday in
the 127bis closed centre, as well as to the many other Palestinian refugees
currently detained in the closed centre.
The large police presence then tear-gassed, trapped, and clubbed the protesters
in front of the Immigration Office. The illegal confinement, in a cramped area,
lasted nearly two hours, and protesters were violently arrested by the police.
Several people were clubbed and wrestled to the ground, and some were even
reportedly arrested and assaulted in the parking lots adjacent to the building.
The crowd then gathered in front of the net, before the police charged and
gassed them again. After more than two hours, the people trapped were released.
Protesters then targeted the Hilton Hotel located at Gare Centrale, attacking
the front and breaking into the hotel. Some of the furniture inside was damaged.
Subsequently, further clashes between protesters and police took place, notably
at the Gare Centrale, Mont des Arts, in the Marolles district, and finally in
the Gare du Midi district, where the procession split into several wildcat
demonstrations. Later in the afternoon, around 4 p.m., the police also charged
at the Parvis de Saint-Gilles, where a wildcat demonstration was still underway.
The vast police presence and the level of repression implemented by the security
forces demonstrate a clear political will on the part of the authorities: to
violently repress all the most dissenting demonstrators.
This massive mobilisation marks a key moment in the fight against the Arizona
government and its fascistic dynamics. It also constituted a moment of
collective strength for the more than 140,000 people who gathered in Brussels
for this occasion.
Among the protesters were people from all social groups. One thing is certain:
popular anger against the social destruction carried out by this fascist
government is not about to die down. On the contrary, it continues to grow.
The post Brussels: Mass mobilisation against “Arizona” government appeared first
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