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Showing posts with label Belgium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Belgium. Show all posts

Khadaffi's daughter launches law suit against NATO

[i-Aisha Khadaffi]

Aisha Khadaffi, "the man's daughter", filed a law suit against NATO. Legal papers were submitted to the prosecutor's office in Brussels her French lawyer.

Ms Khadaffi's four-month daughter, Mastoura, was one of Khadaffi's four grandchildren killed during a NATO bombing raid. (Even though Berlusconi - for one credible news source- alleges this to be propaganda)

The lawsuit is quoted saying "The target was a civil building inhabited by civilians and was neither a command post nor a military control [centre] of the Libyan regime" (Source)

It will be interesting to see how the Belgian court system will react, knowing how fast they backed out of the lawsuit against Bush, Powell, Cheney et al, during the Iraq war. It only took Bush to hint at moving NATO out of Brussels, for Belgium to change the law on war crime law suits.

At least Khadaffi's lawsuit might shed a juridical light on whether NATO steps out of its legal boundaries by providing a tad more than a mere air blockade and safeguarding of humanitarian corridors. Which it grossly does, according to me.

And mean while, we stand by and watch worse happening in Syria and Bahrain.


Picture courtesy Mohamed Messara/EPA

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Wanted: a government for Belgium...

[i-belgian politics]
Today, we broke a new world record. Belgium now beats Iraq's record as the country without a new government for the longest period of time since a general election: 249 days. (Source)

Seems the international community cares more than the Belgians themselves. Voices from abroad say we might need an international mediator like ex-Finnish president Ahtisaari to help us out of the impasse... Guess that puts Belgium on the same level as Kosovo...

Cartoon courtesy Toonpool

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A distracted mind

[i-twoboxes]
Two similar boxes, right? A green and a blue one. For two winters, I have been driving around with the blue box in my trunk, thinking it contained snow chains.

Until today, I found the green box on the shelf in my garage.

[i-two%20boxes%20open]
So apparently, for two winters, I have been driving around with a "jeu de boules" in the back of my car.

Oh well...

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BMW + ice = trouble

[Loband: Object Removed -]

Yesterday, in Antwerp... I am glad I don't own a BMW...

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Snapped: Winter landscape in Belgium

[i-winter landscape in Belgium]
It has been snowing for a couple of days in Belgium. Apart from -what is said to be a record- 511 km of traffic jams on Friday, it gives nice photo opportunities.

The Snapped Series: mobile phone shots from the hip.

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Security... Much blabla, little boumboum.

[i-Berlusconi attacked]
Case #1:
Yesterday, Italian prime minister Berlusconi was hit by a guy hurling a statuette at him. He was taken away with blood all over his face. The hospital later confirmed he broke his nose and two teeth.

Berlusconi was amidst a crowd handing out autographs. Only last weekend tens of thousands marched in Rome to demand Berlusconi's resignation, accusing him of conflicts of interest and of tailoring laws to protect him from prosecution in cases involving his media, real estate and sports empire, and links to the mafia.

[i-Greenpeace fools EU security]
Case #2:
"EU leaders must show leadership!" shouted one while two others waved yellow flags reading "EU Save Copenhagen" and another started reading out a statement on the red carpet meant for the EU top officials: A bus load of Greenpeace activists stunned security officials at last Thursday's EU-summit in Brussels.

Eleven people dressed in suits, driving hired limousines, displaying look-alike security badges - displaying the Greenpeace logo and their real name -, were waved through at both a police and a private security firm's roadblock, before arriving at the red carpet amidst top politicians.

The reaction from the Belgian officials flabbergasted me: "If we would have thought anyone would be stupid enough to do this kind of dangerous stuff, then probably this would not have happened", said Christian De Coninck, the Brussels police spokesperson. "If people use heavy material like faked police cars, and ditto badges, than of course anyone can get in". He stressed the police had not made a single mistake and "there are no holes in the security system at the EU summit."

Securitas, the private security firm which staffed the last road block before entering the red carpet zone, stated: "It is our duty to check all delegate cars. For security reasons, none of these cars should stand still, so we can only do a superficial check." According to Paul Schoolmeesters, spokesman from Securitas, "we only did what the client asked of us".

My case:
Having worked for years in security constrained humanitarian operations, the comments in the last case have me rolling over in (cynical) laughter.

Both cases prove three things:

  1. If anyone wants to 'hit' anything or anyone, they can do so. Easily. It only takes some guts, creativity and very few means.
  2. Any security system has flows, flows which we don't see because we don't want to see them.
  3. Any security system is only as strong as the weakest link. The weakest links are often the people who implement the security checks.
These instances made me think of the security apparatus in the humanitarian world, where a man dressed up in a police uniform walked into our Islamabad office and blew himself up killing five staff and where gunmen shot the guards at the entrance and blew up truck wih 500kgs of explosives destroying a hotel full of aidworkers, etc....

No matter how good we think our security system are, there are always flaws. For as far as I know, no humanitarian organisation employs a "dirty Bob": a person with the sole task to try and break existing security systems, exposing their weaknesses. The results would be astonishing.

Pictures courtesy BBC and De Redactie

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The concept of "service" these days

[i-telephone operators]
Belgian economy minister Van Quickenborne wants to counter the flood of complaints about the country's telecom operators. He proposes a new law setting "two and a half minutes" as the maximum time before you get a "human person" on the hotlines. If the operators would be too busy, the customer can hang up, and should be called back within 24 hours.

Government owned Belgacom, the largest Belgian telecom operator, called this proposal totally unrealistic. There are already 1,400 people working at the Belgacom's call centre.
Maybe it's the Belgian way to reduce the unemployment rate without efforts to improve the core service: just put more people in the complaints department. ;-)

This morning, I spent 18 minutes on hold, when I wanted to verify why €300 of service cheques we ordered three weeks ago, had not arrived. On December 3rd, we got an email confirmation the cheques would arrive within 3 working days. But until today, nothing. No response on Email neither.
Eighteen minutes of hold time later, I was informed that "We are very sorry, but there is a general delay in the delivery of service cheques. Everybody has the same problem. You will have to wait. Probably you will get the cheques this week." Punto.
So what right of appeal does one have? Nothing. This service has no competition. All I can do, is whine about it on my blog. :-))

The nuissances of a comfortable life. I wonder how Mats is doing in Bor, South Sudan. And Jalal in Islamabad. I hope they are safe.

Picture courtesy The Tribune News

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Snapped: Sunset at the Belgian coast

[i-sunset at the Belgian coast]
I was born and raised here: Oostende on the Belgian coast.
Have you read my shortstory about Le Plat Pays? It's an ode to my roots.

The Snapped Series: mobile phone shots from the hip.

PS: Doesn't my iPhone make smashing pictures?

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My angels

I was home, in Belgium, for the weekend. It is at those moments I realize how deep a father's love runs. Lana and Hannah are 15 and 12 now.

[i-Lana and Hannah]
[i-Lana]
[i-Hannah]
[i-Lana]
[i-Lana and Hannah]
[i-Lana and Hannah]

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Weekend in The Ardennes

This weekend, I flew back home to celebrate my parents' 50th anniversary. We all spent a weekend in the Ardennes, right on the border between Luxembourg, Belgium and France.

The walks reconfirmed every country has gorgeous sights. Every trip reveals some great sights, where you can just sit and enjoy the beauty.
This trip was no different. Some snapshots:

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

We ended up in a small French town, Williers, just on the border between France and Belgium. Total population: 44.

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

44 people and one huge walnut tree...

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

44 people and one hotel/restaurant, called 'Chez Odette', after the previous owner. Odette's cafe once was famous for its swallows nesting inside the cafe every year, flying in and out through the door and windows.

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

And of course, a walk in the Ardennes *has* to be concluded with a beer from one of the monasteries.

[i-Ardennes Belgium May 2009]

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Walking by the Scheldt

The Scheldt (or "de Schelde" in Dutch), is the main river in our part of the country. It makes Antwerp a key sea port before spreading wide into a huge estuary. The southern part of this estuary runs close to the Belgian-Dutch border, and features rich nature reserves and astonishing sceneries.

Seeing the ocean vessels pass by, almost in a hand's reach reminds me of the Suez canal.

[i-Wester Scheldt]

[i-Wester Scheldt]

[i-Wester Scheldt]

[i-Wester Scheldt]

The strong tides and labyrinth of sand banks not only makes it treacherous to navigate, but offers beautiful landscape.

[i-Wester Scheldt]

[i-Wester Scheldt]

It was the last walk with the girls and "Mr.H", our pup, before I fly back to Rome this afternoon.

[i-Wester Scheldt]

[i-Wester Scheldt]

Behind the dikes, the vegetation is green lush, and stretches as far as the eye can reach.

[i-Wester Scheldt]

[i-Wester Scheldt]

Now, all that is left is to pack my bags, and get on a plane. The two weeks of holidays are over. The horizon is calling again....

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Spring in Belgium

As we were driving through Belgium, Luxemburg and Germany, we were saying to eachother how it looked like spring was pushing to break through.

A week later, when we came back, we found everything in bloom. Spring has arrived.

A view from our home in Belgium:

[i-spring in Belgium]

Wild flowers in our garden:

[i-spring in Belgium]

[i-Spring in Belgium]

[i-Spring in Belgium]

[i-DSC03502]

[i-flowers in belgian spring]

[i-flowers in Belgian Spring]

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World Water Day: Record for longest toilet queue

[i-World Water Day: Longest toilet queue in Brussels]I hope not many people really "had to go urgently", but on the occasion of World Water Day, UNICEF, the UN's Child's Fund, got 756 people lined up to a latrine in central Brussels to raise awareness for the need for clean water on World Water Day. (Full)

The 2009, the theme for World Water Day is "Shared Water - Shared Opportunities", with a focus on transboundary waters.

Many claim the global water crisis is one of the causes of the global food crisis. And soon will become the scarcest natural resource. (Full)

Interested? Here is some background reading on the importance of water hygiene, sanitation and the right to access to clean water. (Thanks Simon!)

More on The Road about water

Picture courtesy Belga

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Why do things always break when I am at home?

In case you have not realized this yet: Tine and the girls live in Belgium and I live.. eh.. in other places. Currently I am based in Rome, Italy.

The agreement is that when I am home, Tine can give me a stack of things to do. Things she had no time for while running a family with two teenagers and a dog, a house and garden, and a full-time job (still a mystery to me how she does it).

The funny thing we have noticed is that things typically "wait to break", until I am home. The moment I step through that door, lights stop working, doors don't open anymore and locks break.

Last year, on Christmas Eve (!) coming home at midnight, Lana noticed a problem with the power lines along the street, leading to our house.
work to do[i-work to do]
She said "Dad, funny, these wires are really dragging... Something seems wrong." As usual, dad ignored the remark, but once in the house, we found we had no power.

Earlier that night, a lorry caught one of the electricity wires further down the street, and with a domino effect, all the poles started to bend over.

Guess who was at the end of the line? Right, our house. So our connection got partially ripped off. Black marks on the wall showed where the sparks had been flying.. ;-)

work to do[i-work to do]

No power on Xmas eve, at 1 AM... ! No electricity means no heating neither. No warm water. To my surprise, the power company came to repair it at 2:30 AM. By 3:30 AM we were in business again.

To keep up with this Murphy tradition this year, the fresh water pipe broke and flooded the lawn.

work to do[i-work to do]

Oh and the dishwasher also gave up. And the toilet downstairs stopped working. And for some strange reason all doors started to squeak. Oh and the grill melted one of its iron supports. Oh, and also...

Today, the last bit is repaired. I am ready to fly back to Rome. I just hope nothing else is breaking before I leave. Everyone has strict orders not to touch anything anymore until I left. :-)

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Home, the Flemish coast.

Remember the short story Home - Le Plat Pays in which I raved about my roots, the place I was born, the Flemish coast?

Today, in a ice cold biting wind, we made a wonderful walk through the dunes. A day out of a thousand. Some shots:

Winter 2008 on the coast[i-Winter 2008 on the coast]

Winter 2008 on the coast[i-Winter 2008 on the coast]

Winter 2008 on the coast[i-Winter 2008 on the coast]

Winter 2008 on the coast[i-Winter 2008 on the coast]

Winter 2008 on the coast[i-Winter 2008 on the coast]

Winter 2008 on the coast[i-Winter 2008 on the coast]

Winter 2008 on the coast[i-Winter 2008 on the coast]

Watch the hires pictures in a Flickr slideshow:

[Loband: Object Removed -]

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An extensive list of syndication and feed readers for our blog, you find here

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My Ebook Short Stories

In the past 15 years, I travelled through, lived or worked in over 100 countries. I met many people, lived through memorable moments which I captured in these stories:
Reader's Digest of "The Road"
Introduction to "The Road to the Horizon"
Nights on Deserted Islands
The Children of Ambriz
The Real "Out of Africa"
Goma, the Scent of Africa
How Cigarettes Once Saved My Life
Ambush
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Links

As the years went by, I collected a large amount of blogs and websites I like:

● The largest collection of blogs by fellow aidworkers you'll find anywhere Subscribe to the AidBlogs RSS Feed[i-Subscribe to the AidBlogs RSS Feed]
Resources for aidworkers Subscribe to the RSS Feed of For Those Who Want to Know[i-Subscribe to the RSS Feed of For Those Who Want to Know]
News sites specialized in aid, humanitarian work and nonprofit causes Subscribe to the AidNews RSS Feed[i-Subscribe to the AidNews RSS Feed]
● Expats, travellers, adventurers and people with their heart in the right place, you can find here

Other interesting blogs to add? Let me know!
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My Inspiration

Click to see the videos that inspired me[i-Click to see the videos that inspired me]Check out the videos clips that inspired me over the past years: Videos about aid work and advocacy.
Check out my favourite music[i-Check out my favourite music]Music always was a main source of inspiration for me. This is a list of my all time favourites.
A selection of the books I read lately[i-A selection of the books I read lately]Here is a selection of my favourite books, or browse through my library. I frequently comment on books I read.
My pictures on Flickr[i-My pictures on Flickr]Travelling makes me wiser. All the pictures I collect along the Road of Life, I store in my Flickr library.
Humanitarian news[i-Humanitarian news]I collect, scan, read, browse, absorb, digest and discuss news topics to learn, understand and broaden my views.
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About Me

[i-link]Peter. Flemish, European, aid worker, expeditioner, sailor, traveller, husband, father, friend, nutcase. Not necessarily in that order.


Click to see my social media network[i-Click to see my social media network]
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The Legal Bla-Bla (Just in Case)

This blog expresses my personal opinions, and not those of my current or past employers.
Creative Commons License[i-Creative Commons License]
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License: Please re-use any material for non-commercial purposes, but link back to this blog.
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Car always in the repair shop?
The California lemon law maybe able to help
with your defective vehicle.
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With over 17 years of experience,
claim your accident compensation
with National Accident Helpline
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