‘Vaccines don’t make you free’: Thousands protest
COVID-19 measures in Brussels
Demonstration comes as national counter-terrorism
agency warns the pandemic is fueling polarization.
BY GABRIELA
GALINDO
December 5,
2021 7:41 pm
Thousands
of protesters took to the streets of Brussels on Sunday to march against
vaccines and coronavirus restrictions as Europe remains gripped by a resurgence
of COVID-19 infections and national authorities fear demonstrators are becoming
more radical.
Police said
some 8,000 took part, a sharp decline from the 35,000 estimated at in a similar
protest two weeks ago.
Groups of
protesters clashed with police as the cortege reached its destination in the
Cinquantenaire Park, near the neighborhood housing European Union institutions.
Police officers used water cannons against projectile-throwing protesters.
“A group
sought confrontation with a police roadblock … tear gas and water cannons were
used,” police spokesperson Ilse Van de Keere said. Officers called on the
crowds to disperse at that point, she added.
Police also
announced on Twitter that they would start arresting “troublemakers.”
Belgium’s
government last Friday tightened sanitary measures against the pandemic, in a
bid to contain the surge in cases overwhelming the country’s hospitals once
again and landing Belgium among the worst-hit countries in the EU. The latest
measures include making mask-wearing mandatory for children over the age of 6,
and closing kindergartens and primary schools from December 20.
Several
protesters, including some accompanied by children, carried placards with
slogans such as “our children will not be your guinea pigs.”
Violence
also flared at the November 21 protest, which had likewise followed the
announcement of stricter measures. After that event, Belgium’s
counter-terrorism agency (OCAD) reportedly warned of radicalization as
different movements joined forces for the first time to oppose the government’s
anti-pandemic measures in a “heated up and polarized” climate.
“Hate
speech towards policymakers, the media and virologists seems to be becoming
more and more socially acceptable,” the agency cautioned, according to the
daily De Standaard.
Largely
organized via social media, Sunday’s demonstration was billed as the second
“nationwide march for freedom.”
Demonstrators
held placards reading “vaccines don’t make you free,” and “stop the
dictatorship.” They chanted “freedom” and “COVID Safety Pass, no thanks!”
referring to the government’s digital certificate needed for entry into
restaurants and pubs or large events.
Many
denounced the “corrupt media” and called for the government of Prime Minister
Alexander De Croo to resign, with some targeting Health Minister Frank
Vandenbroucke in particular.
“I can no
longer recognize the society that we are living in,” said one participant, who
declined to identify herself. “I have never seen the government track down
healthy people.”
Demonstrators
also signaled wider distrust of authorities, with signs linking the sanitary measures
and use of digital tools such as QR codes to a weakening of civil liberties.
Similar
protests were held this weekend in other European cities. Over 40,000
protesters were reported marching in the Austrian capital of Vienna, while
thousands more protested in the Dutch city of Utrecht.
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