Tuesday, December 23, 2008

"whether Belgium – already one of the world’s most decentralised states – is likely to survive as a single entity."

I suppose this constitutes something more like divorcing your neighbor. It's interesting that the financial crisis is here effecting the political crisis. From the FT:

"
Belgium edges towards political crisis

By Tony Barber in Brussels

Published: December 19 2008 18:09 | Last updated: December 19 2008 18:09

Belgium slipped closer towards a full-blown political crisis on Friday when Yves Leterme, prime minister, proposed his government’s resignation after the nation’s supreme court found signs of government interference with the judicial system.

Mr Leterme’s gesture did not automatically mean the collapse of his five-party ruling coalition, because King Albert II, as head of state, has the power to accept or reject his resignation. During an earlier government crisis in July, the king rejected it( I DIDN'T REMEMBER THAT THEY HAD A KING ).

Nevertheless, the turmoil underlined how a seemingly permanent atmosphere of confusion and disunity in Belgian politics has caused more and more speculation about whether Belgium – already one of the world’s most decentralised states – is likely to survive as a single entity( NO ).

The latest trouble concerns allegations that the government tried to influence a court decision on the break-up of Fortis, the former Belgian-Dutch financial services group( THIS COMPANY IS A PART OF THE CURRENT FINANCIAL SHAKEUP ). The first political casualty was Jo Vandeurzen, Belgium’s justice minister, who resigned on Friday before Mr Leterme’s proposal that the entire government should quit.

Political commentators were virtually unanimous that the Fortis affair had damaged Mr Leterme, even though the supreme court report that prompted his resignation offer concluded there was no watertight evidence that the government had crossed the strict line supposed to divide politics from justice.

There was no “legal proof of an attempt to interfere with the judiciary, but there are undoubtedly significant indicators that point in that direction”, Ghislain Londers, the court chairman, said in the report.

Under a worst-case scenario, the entire five-party government might be forced from office, destabilising Belgium at a time of severe fiscal and economic challenges and recalling the long spell of paralysis that followed the most recent general election in June 2007.

Profound divisions between Belgium’s French-speaking and Flemish-speaking political parties and linguistic communities prevented Mr Leterme, a Flemish Christian Democrat, from forming a government for nine months and have hobbled his coalition ever since.

The government has been keen to put on a show of strength and stability during the global financial turbulence and European economic recession, because together the two crises threaten to put great strain on Belgium’s public finances.

The Belgian public debt is more than 80 per cent of gross domestic product – well below the 130 per cent recorded in the early 1990s, but high enough to require a firm hand on the public finances in today’s circumstances.

In spite of their quarrels, the French- and Flemish-speaking parties found enough common ground this year to reach an informal understanding that they would ask Belgians to return to the polls next June.

For narrow reasons of party political advantage, few wanted to let the Fortis affair explode into such a huge scandal that they would be obliged to tear up this informal pact. But their power to contain the affair was limited by the sheer gravity of the charge of interference with the judiciary.

The affair burst into the open after an appeals court in Brussels ruled that Fortis shareholders should have been consulted about a government-backed plan to sell part of the bank’s assets to BNP Paribas of France."

Here's what this is about. From Bloomberg:

"Dec. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Fortis, the insurer that was once Belgium’s largest financial-services firm, clashed with some investors at a meeting in Brussels by sticking to an agreement to sell the Belgian insurance business to BNP Paribas SA( FRENCH ).

The board of Fortis is considering a challenge to a Dec. 12 court injunction that ordered the transaction to be put to investors for a vote by Feb. 12, Vice Chairman Jan-Michiel Hessels told investors at an extraordinary shareholders’ meeting in Brussels today.

“Both parties can walk away from the deal after Feb. 28,” Hessels told investors, adding that neither Fortis nor BNP Paribas is obliged to pay a break-up fee should the transaction fall through. “Things have only gotten worse since we agreed to sell and I expect more negative news to come from the financial crisis, affecting the valuation of assets.”

Fortis on Oct. 6 agreed to sell Fortis Insurance Belgium NV, the country’s largest insurance company, to BNP Paribas for 5.7 billion euros ($8 billion) in cash. The transaction was part of a state-organized breakup( PLEASE NOTE THIS ) of Fortis, meant to prevent the collapse( NOTE WELL ) of its main banking unit with about 238 billion euros of deposits at the time, according to a presentation on Paris-based BNP Paribas’s Web site.

Markdowns

Fortis Insurance Belgium had 2.1 billion euros of shareholders’ equity as of Sept. 30, after posting a third- quarter loss of 281 million euros after markdowns and losses on investments totaling 339 million euros after tax, Fortis said Dec. 17.

“To be honest, I’m not happy with the court ruling because time is running out,” Hessels said. “Market conditions continue to deteriorate and BNP Paribas will think three times before going ahead with the purchase.”

Fortis shareholders voted 97 percent in favor of a proposal today to continue the activities of the Belgian holding company Fortis SA/NV. Under Belgian corporate law, Fortis had to put the possibility of liquidation to a vote after shareholders’ equity fell to less than half of the statutory capital.

To contact the reporter on this story: John Martens in Brussels at jmartens1@bloomberg.net"

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