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King Albert fighting to keep Belgium one

King Albert II on Tuesday immediately began political discussions with lawmakers to try to resolve the political crisis after Belgium's government collapsed Monday, unable to resolve an enduring divide over more self-rule for the country's Dutch (Flemish) and French-speakers. The gap was so wide the premier suggested the end of Belgium as a country was looming.

Kingexpm The King (on picture, left with Leterme) did not formally accept the resignation of government offered by Premier Yves Leterme late Monday, so Leterme's government stays on in a caretaker capacity for now. In an unusual declaration, the premier said Belgium's constitutional crisis stems from the fact that "consensus politics across Belgium's widening linguistic divide no longer works."

Leterme failed to get his cabinet _ an unwieldy alliance of Christian Democrats, Liberals, Socialists and nationalist hard-liners from both language camps that took office March 20 _ to agree on a future together by devolving more federal powers to the Dutch-speaking Flanders and Francophone Wallonia.

Belgie Granting Belgium's Dutch and French-speaking communities more self-rule began, gradually, in the 1970s, in such areas as culture, youth affairs and sports. Since then education, housing, trade, tourism, agriculture and other areas were shifted from the federal government and Flanders, Wallonia and bilingual Brussels were given regional governments and parliaments.

Now Francophone parties accuse Dutch-speakers of trying to separate themselves completely from French-speaking Wallonia, where the 15 percent unemployment rate is triple that of Dutch-speaking Flanders. Flemish parties want their more prosperous, Dutch-speaking northern half of the country to be more autonomous by shifting corporate and other taxes, some social security measures, transport, health, labor and justice matters to the language regions.

Mainstream Flemish politicians say there is room for more regional autonomy in one country but hardline nationalist parties in Flanders advocate the breakup of Belgium. © GPD AP

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