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Elementary Part 1 Ready
Bye bye Belgium?
Level 1 Elementary Key words 1 Find the information 2 Look in the text and find this information as quickly as possible. 1. How old is Belgium? 2. What percentage of northern Belgians think Belgium will break up? 3. What is the main language spoken in the Brussels suburb of Halle? 4. What is the name of the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium? 5. What is the name of the French-speaking part of Belgium? 6. How long has Belgium been without a government? 245 Bye bye Belgium? Jon Henley November 13, 2007 For 177 years Belgium has been a federal kingdom with two languages, French and Dutch. Now some people think that the country is going to break up and divide into two different countries – Dutch-speaking Flanders and French-speaking Wallonia. If you believe what Belgian newspapers and politicians are saying, the country is in the worst trouble since the dark days of the Second World War. Belgium has had no government for 156 days. Having no government is not the end of the world but there is a very real fear that the end of Belgium is very near. The people of Belgium seem to accept it. In the north, 63% of people think the country will divide. “This place is finished,” says René Vanderweiden, a telecoms engineer. “Maybe not now, maybe not in ten years’ time. But within my lifetime, I’d guess. The Flemings (Belgium’s Dutch-speaking majority) want to leave, and they’re not afraid to say that they want to leave. They’re impatient and they weren’t like that before.” Joelle Rutten, a bookshop assistant, says the problems are the fault of the politicians. “We don’t need them,” she says. “Look at us – we’re all going to work, paying our taxes, nothing has changed. They don’t understand ordinary people. They argue about things that mean nothing to most of us. It’s a scandal! They don’t know what they’re doing.” But some politicians know exactly what they are doing. The deputy mayor of the Brussels suburb of Halle, Mark Demesmaeker, says that he “can no longer see the value of Belgium. There are six million of us Flemings, we work hard, we make money, and we could be independent. In fact, Flanders would be one of the wealthier small countries of Europe. Belgium is simply not good for us.” The main problem, says Demesmaeker, is that Halle’s French speakers “do not want to learn Dutch. They come here, they think Halle is part of Brussels, they walk into the shops and they say, ‘Bonjour’. Most don’t try to speak Dutch. Listen, I have nothing against Walloons. I often go to the French part of Belgium, and there they are very nice people, completely different. But here ... Well, they are a bit arrogant, I think. French was the main language and culture here for a long time, you see. And the Dutch-speaking inhabitants of Halle don’t like too many people speaking French here. They don’t like some of the classes in our schools being half-full of French children.” A local shopkeeper agreed with Demesmaeker: “This is Flanders here, and people must respect our language and our culture. If we go to Wallonia, we expect to have to speak French. It’s only right. And it’s only right that when Belgian French-speakers come here, they should speak Dutch. It’s just being polite. But most of them can’t speak Dutch or don’t want to speak Dutch.” Last week Belgium’s Flemish politicians voted to break up the Halle district. The Walloon MPs walked out of the parliament in protest. Charles Piqué, the French-speaking minister-president of Brussels, says the vote was symbolic. “It is not the end, I don’t think, not yet. ... We have learned in this country, over the years, to avoid these kinds of situations. But this shows that the Flemish politicians want to increase tensions between the communities. And this is just the beginning of their demands. What happens next is critical.” Joelle Rutten, the bookshop worker, does not believe that Belgium is about to break up: “We’ve grown up in this country; it’s a nice country, a friendly country. It would be stupid, completely idiotic, to break it up just because a few stupid politicians cannot see sense.” Demesmaeker and his Flemish friends want a major reform of Belgium’s constitution. “A confederation – two independent states that Download 7.3 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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