Belgium's Prince Laurent protests over fine
- Published
Prince Laurent of Belgium, the brother of King Philippe, has complained to the government about plans to fine him for conducting unauthorised diplomacy.
The government moved to cut his annual allowance of €308,000 (£270,000; $370,000) by 10-15% after he visited the Chinese embassy in July.
The prince donned full naval uniform to honour the 90th anniversary of the Chinese People's Army at the embassy.
He had been warned about unapproved meetings with foreign dignitaries.
In previous encounters he:
Met Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickramasinghe when the latter visited Brussels in October 2016
Visited the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2011, meeting President Joseph Kabila
Made several visits to Libya when the late Muammar Gaddafi was still in power
Prime Minister Charles Michel warned the prince about seeking permission from the foreign ministry before conducting any diplomatic activity.
Despite the warnings, he went to the embassy and tweeted a photo of himself at the celebration (the Twitter account was later shut down). China's state news agency Xinhua also tweeted photos.
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In a to Mr Michel, quoted by the La Libre news site (in French) on Friday, the prince's lawyer. Laurent Arnauts, argued that his visit to the embassy caused "no diplomatic damage of any kind".
The lawyer says the prince, 54, has no access to social security or a pension, nor has he the right to do any paid work.
It is, he writes, a situation that goes "against the most fundamental human rights in a developed society".
The average net annual income in Belgium is about €25,000,