Everything about Brussels-capital Region totally explained
The
Brussels-Capital Region ( ) or short
Brussels Region (French:
Région Bruxelloise, Dutch:
Brussels Gewest, German:
Brüsseler Region) is one of the three
regions of
Belgium, while the
French Community of Belgium and the
Flemish Community do exercise, each for their part, their cultural competencies on the territory of the region. French and Dutch are the official languages; most public services are bilingual (exceptions being education and a couple of others). The Capital Region is predominantly
French-speaking - about 85-90% of the population are French-speakers (including migrants), and about 10-15%
History
The Belgian Constitution announced the creation of three regions since the constitutional reform of
24 December 1970, when an article 107quater (the current art. 3) was inserted, stating that "Belgium is made up of three regions: The Flemish region, the Walloon region and the Brussels region."
However, only after the adoption the
special law of
12 January 1989, the Region came into existence, nine years later than the Flemish and the Walloon region.
Institutions
Because of how the federalisation was handled in Belgium, but also because of the fact that the municipalities in the region didn't take part in the merger that affected municipalities in the rest of Belgium in the seventies, the public institutions in Brussels offer a bewildering complexity. The complexity is more apparent in the lawbooks than in the facts, since the members of the Brussels Parliament and Government also act in other capacities, for example as members of the council of the Brussels agglomeration or the community commissions.
One distinguishes:
- The region, with a regional parliament of 89 members (72 French-speaking, 17 Dutch-speaking, parties are organised on a linguistic basis), plus a regional government, consisting of an officially linguistically neutral, but in practice French-speaking minister-president, two French-speaking and two Dutch-speaking ministers, one Dutch-speaking secretary of state and two French-speaking secretaries of state. This parliament can enact ordinances (Dutch: ordonnanties, French: ordonnances), which have equal status as a national legislative act.
- The agglomeration, with a council and a board, with the same membership as the organs of the Brussels Region. This is a decentralised administrative public body, assuming competences which elsewhere in Belgium are exercised by municipalities or provinces (fire brigade, waste disposal). The by-laws enacted by it don't have the status of a legislative act.
- A bi-communitarian public authority, Common Community Commission (Dutch: Gemeenschappelijke Gemeenschapscommissie, GGC, French: Commission communautaire commune, COCOM), with a United Assembly (for example the members of the regional parliament) and a United Board (the ministers - not the secretaries of state - of the region, with the minister-president not having the right to vote). This Commission has two capacities: it's a decentralised administrative public body, responsible for implementing cultural policies of common interest. It can give subsidies and enact by-laws. In another capacity it can also enact ordinances, which have equal status as a national legislative act, in the field of the welfare competencies of the communities: in the Brussels-Capital Region, both the French Community and the Flemish Community can exercise competencies in the field of welfare, but only in regard to institutions that are unilingual (for example a private French-speaking retirement home or the Dutch-speaking hospital of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel). The Common Community Commission is competent for policies aiming directly at private persons or at bilingual institutions (for example the centra for social welfare of the 19 municipalities). Its ordinances have to be enacted with a majority in both linguistic groups. Failing such a majority, a new vote can be held, where a majority of at least one third in each linguistic group is sufficient.
- 2 community-specific public authorities, Flemish Community Commission (Dutch: Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie, VGC) for the Flemings in Brussels, and the French Community Commission (French: Commission communautaire française or COCOF), with an assembly (for example the members of parliament of the linguistic group) and a board (the ministers and secretaries of state of the linguistic group). These commissions implement policies of the Flemish Community and the French Community in the Brussels-Capital Region.
- The French Community Commission has also another capacity: some legislative competencies of the French Community have been devolved to the Walloon Region (for the French language area of Belgium) and to the French Community Commission (for the bilingual language area) (procedure contained in art. 138 of the Belgian Constitution). The Flemish Community didn't do so, it even merged the Flemish Region into the Flemish Community (procedure in art. 137 of the Belgian Constitution) - this has to do with different conceptions in the two communities, one focussing more on the communities and the other more on the regions, causing an asymmetrical federalism. Because of this devolution, the French Community Commission can enact decrees, which are legislative acts.
- The Brussels Region is neither a province, nor does it belong to one. Within the Region, 99% of the provincial competencies are assumed by the Brussels regional institutions. Remaining is only the governor of Brussels-Capital and some aides.
- 19 local, municipal authorities with a 600-odd municipal councillors
- 6 inter-municipal policing zones
- intercommunal societies created freely by the municipalities
Also the federal state, the French Community and the Flemish Community exercise competencies on the territory of the region. 19 of the 72 French-speaking members of the Brussels Parliament are also members of the
Parliament of the French Community of Belgium, and until 2004 this was also the case for six Dutch-speaking members, who were at the same time members of the
Flemish Parliament. Now, people voting for a Flemish party have to vote separately for 6 directly elected members of the Flemish Parliament.
Due to the multiple capacities of single members of parliament, there are parliamentarians who are at the same member of the Brussels Parliament, member of the Assembly of the Common Community Commission, member of the Assembly of the French Community Commission, member of the Parliament of the French Community of Belgium and "community senator" in the
Belgian Senate. At the moment, this is the case for Mr. François Roelants du Vivier (for the
Mouvement Réformateur), Mrs. Amina Derbaki Sbaï (since June 2004 for the
Parti Socialiste, but beforehand, since 2003, for the Mouvement Réformateur) and Mrs Sfia Bouarfa (since 2001 for the Parti Socialiste).
Municipalities
The Brussels-Capital Region is divided into 19
municipalities, of which the
City of Brussels is the largest and most populous. See the
list of municipalities of the Brussels-Capital Region.
Demographics
On
January 1 2005, the region had a population of 1,006,749 for 161.382
km² which gives a
population density of 6,238.29 inhabitants per km².
Population by national origin at the 1st March 1991 (last census ever organized in Belgium) |
| Belgians born in Belgium (and Belgian-born) |
607,446 |
63.7% |
Belgians born abroad (and Belgian-born) including: Congo, Rwanda and Burundi (former Belgian overseas territories) |
21,028 8,116 |
2,2% (100%) 38.6% |
Naturalized migrants (not born in Belgium, not Belgian-born) including: France Morocco |
36,938 6,348 3,022 |
3.9% (100%) 17.2% 8.2% |
Naturalized 1st and 2nd generations (born in Belgium, not Belgian-born) including: France Morocco |
17,045 2,757 2,522 |
1.8% (100%) 16.2% 14.8% |
Non-naturalized 1st and 2nd generations including: Morocco |
87,987 37,300 |
9.2% (100%) 42.4% |
Old migrants (born abroad, foreign nationals, living in Belgium in 1986) including: Morocco Italy |
123,411 35,138 16,027 |
12.9% (100%) 28.5% 13% |
Recent migrants (born abroad, foreign nationals, arrived in Belgium after 1986) including: France Morocco |
60,185 8,513 4,970 |
6.3% (100%) 14.1% 8.3% |
| Total Brussels-Capital Region |
954,040 |
100% |
source of data in the above table: T. Eggerickx et al., De allochtone bevolking in België, Algemene Volks- en Woningtelling op 1 maart 1991, Monografie nr. 3, 1999, Nationaal Instituut voor de Statistiek
At the last Belgian census in 1991, there were 63.7% inhabitants in Brussels-Capital Region who answered they were Belgian citizens, born as such in Belgium. However, there have been numerous individual or familial migrations towards Brussels since the end of the 18th century, including political refugees (
Karl Marx,
Victor Hugo,
Pierre Joseph Proudhon,
Léon Daudet for example) from neighbouring or more distanced countries as well as labour migrants, former foreign students or expatriots, and many Belgian families in Brussels can tell at least a foreign grandparent. And even among the Belgians, many became Belgian only recently.
The original Dutch dialect of Brussels (
Brussels) is a form of
Brabantic (the variant of Dutch spoken in the ancient
Duchy of Brabant) with a significant number of loanwords from French, and still survives among a minority of inhabitants called
Brusseleers, many of them quite bi- and multilingual, or educated in French and not writing the Dutch language. Brussels and its suburbs evolved from a Dutch-dialect speaking town to a mainly French speaking town. The ethnic and national self-identification of the inhabitants is quite different along ethnic lines. For their French-speaking
Bruxellois, it can vary from Belgian, Francophone Belgian,
Bruxellois (like the
Memeller in interwar ethnic censuses in
Memel),
Walloon (for people who migrated from the Wallonia Region at an adult age); for immigrants from Flanders it's mainly either Flemish or
Brusselaar (Dutch for an inhabitant); for the
Brusseleers, most of them simply consider themselves as belonging to Brussels. For the many rather recent migrants from other countries, the identification also includes all the national origins: people tend to call themselves Moroccans or Turks rather than an American-style hyphenated version.
Recent immigration has brought its population of foreign origin to 56%. The two largest foreign groups come from two
francophone countries:
France and
Morroco. The first language of roughly half of the inhabitants isn't an official one of the Capital Region. Nevertheless, about three out of four residents have the Belgian nationality. In general the population of Brussels is younger and the gap between rich and poor is wider. Brussels also has a large concentration of Muslims, mostly of Turkish and Moroccan ancestry, and mainly French-speaking black Africans. However, Belgium doesn't collect statistics by ethnic background, so exact figures are unknown.
Both immigration and its status as head of the European Commission made Brussels a really cosmopolitan city. The migrant communities, as well as rapidly growing communities of EU-nationals from other EU-member states, speak
Moroccan dialectal Arabic,
French,
Turkish,
Spanish (most Spaniards came from the
Asturias, a minority from
Andalusia and some from
Catalonia and the
Basque country),
Italian,
Polish,
Rif Berber,
English and other languages, including those of every EU-member state in the expat communities. The degree of linguistic integration varies widely within each migrant group.
Among all major migrants groups from outside the
EU, a majority of the permanent residents have acquired the Belgian nationality.
Although historically (since the
Counter-Reformation persecution and expulsion of Protestants by the Spaniards in the 16th century)
Roman Catholic, most people in Brussels are non-practising. About 10% of the population regularly attends church services. Among the religions, historically dominant
Roman Catholicism prevailing mostly in a relaxed way, one finds large minorities of
Muslims,
atheists,
agnosticists, and of the philosophical school of
humanism, the latter mainly as
vrijzinnig-laïcité (an approximate translation would be secularists or
free thinkers) or practicing
Humanism as a
life stance - Brussels houses several key organisations for both kinds. Other (recognized) religions (
Protestantism,
Anglicanism,
Orthodoxy and
Judaism) are practised by much smaller groups in Brussels. Recognized religions and
Laïcité enjoy public funding and school courses: every pupil in an official school from 6 years old to 18 must choose 2 hours per week of compulsory religion- or
Laïcité-inspired morals.
Further Information
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