Belgium faces first mass protest against the new government

Update: 2014-11-07 00:19 GMT
The march is the first in a series of rallies and strikes against economic and social reforms announced by Prime Minister Charles Michel, a French-speaking liberal who heads an unprecedented centre-right coalition that includes Flemish nationalists.

Protesters waved flares and held banners as they massed for the start of the march, while there was disruption to subway trains, trams and buses throughout the capital, where the European Union is based.

Police said they expected as many as 80,000 demonstrators while the unions hope more than 100,000 protesters will show up. Rail companies said they have already sold more than 80,000 low-cost tickets to encourage people to attend the demonstration.

Workers and staff at steel firms, the ports of Antwerp and Zeebrugge, the post office and in education are also planning to stage a work slowdown. ‘The whole raft of government measures create a potentially explosive cocktail,’ Marie-Helene Ska, secretary general of the leading Belgian union, CSC, warned in the newspaper Le Soir.

The unions as well as the socialist, green and extreme left parties oppose a decision to scrap plans for the usual automatic cost-of-living raises next year.

They also reject plans to raise the retirement age from 65 to 66 from 2025 and to 67 in 2030.

The new government is also aiming to impose cost-cutting measures on the civil service as well as in the fields of culture and scientific research. ‘We have made an agreement on a government and an agreement on a budget which will balance Belgium’s books by 2018,’ the 38-year-old Michel said last month after the coalition was formed.

The coalition groups three Flemish parties -- the nationalist New Flemish Alliance, the Christian Democrat CD&V and the liberal Open VLD -- and Michel’s French-speaking liberals. The new government is likely to face the same problems as before, most notably the unavoidable division between

Belgium’s Flemish-speaking north, which tends to be more conservative, and a French-speaking, more liberal south. Over the years, greater powers have been devolved to the regions to ease cropping communal tensions.

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