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 BelgiumA Decade of Scandals Leads to ReformIn the 1990s Belgium’s public life was
shaken by a number of serious scandals. In 1991, a former deputy prime
minister and socialist leader was murdered in a contract killing that took
several years to come to light. The Dutroux child-sex-and-murder affair in
1996 led to national outrage, compounded by the realization that less
official negligence and inefficiency could have saved the lives of several
children. The tragedy fueled pressure for reform of the political,
judicial, and police systems. In 1998, along with two other major Belgian
politicians, former NATO secretary-general Willy Claes was convicted of
bribery. In 1999, a public health scandal involving dioxin, a
cancer-causing chemical, resulted in the unexpected electoral defeat of
Christian-Democratic prime minister Jean-Luc Dehaene.
In June 1999, the new prime minister, Guy
Verhofstadt of the Liberal Party, cobbled together a coalition of
liberals, socialists, and greens, which was continued, without the green
parties, after the May 2003 election. His government passed extremely
liberal social policies, including the legalization of gay marriage and
euthanasia and the partial decriminalization of marijuana. Against the
wishes of the prime minister’s party, a parliamentary majority also
extended voting rights at local elections to all foreign residents.
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