Belgium plans to end army protection for Antwerp synagogues

Proposal, which is not yet finalised, would mean Antwep's shuls would no longer have soldiers guarding them

An orthodox Jew and a boy pass two police officers in Antwerp, Belgium, 2014. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

Belgium is planning to stop providing soldiers for security around synagogues in Antwerp.

The plan, which has not been finalised, would end the army’s protection in the city’s Jewish neighbourhood in September. The redeployment is connected with budgetary and manpower issues in Belgium, where COVID-19 has severely impacted the economy and killed more than 9,000 people.

“The Jewish community needs more, not less, protection in these difficult times,” the Forum of Jewish Organizations of Flemish Jews wrote in a statement published Monday about the plan.

Belgian troops were first posted to guard Jewish institutions in Antwerp in May 2014 after an Islamist murdered four people in a terrorist shooting at the Jewish Museum of Belgium in Brussels, located about 40 miles south of Antwerp.

Antwerp’s centre has about 100 Jewish institutions servicing a predominantly Charedi population of 18,000 people.

In 2018, an unidentified man was filmed stealing mezuzahs from the door frames of 20 Antwerp homes days after a Charedi man and his son narrowly escaped being rammed by a passing vehicle that swerved in the direction onto the pavement while they were walking to synagogue on Shabbat. Police said there was no indication the incident was a hate crime.

In 2017, police apprehended and briefly detained a man who allegedly assaulted a Charedi man on the street in Antwerp while shouting “Jew.”

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