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Europe
Belgium Decides to Boycott Sex, Shaving Till Government Formation
2011-02-11
[An Nahar] No sex here please! As Belgium hits eight months without a government this week, a boycott on sex is being suggested as a way out of the nation's longest political impasse.
"Until there's a new administration, Hervé, you can just put that thing away!"
"When a situation's dire and nothing's moving, either you become a cynic or you react with humor," said Marleen Temmerman, the Belgian senator and gynecologist who threw up the notion.
"I'm cynically going with humor!"
Speaking in her Ghent office, Temmerman said her call for "no more sex until a new administration" dates back to a trip to Kenya last month where she got wind of another novel bid to break the deadlock -- a boycott on shaving.

That was from Belgian actor Benoit Poelvoorde, star of early 1990s mockumentary "Man Bites Dog" and recent movie "Coco After Chanel."

"Let's keep our beards until Belgium rises again," he urged on Belgian TV.
Ummm... Again?
Temmerman said "the men loved it and that was when Kenyan women reminded us about their sex strike" in 2009 to demand a political solution. "Within a month a deal was done there."

Colombian women likewise in 2006 staged a strike "of crossed legs" to press gangsters to give up their guns. And in ancient Greece, Aristophanes' play Lysistrata sees women boycotting the marital bed to end the Peloponnesian war.

In Belgium, feuding politicians from the Dutch-speaking north and the francophone south have been squabbling to strike a coalition government deal ever since elections last June 13 failed to produce an outright majority.

As fears mount of a lasting divorce between the two language communities, the figurehead sovereign, King Albert II, has named a succession of special envoys to bridge the divide, but all efforts have floundered.

"People are growing increasingly angry," said Temmerman. "We had to act."

Current go-between, caretaker finance minister Didier Reynders, is due to end a mediation mission next week amid public anger and fears for Belgium's economic future if no solution is found.

The gynecologist, also involved in health projects in Africa, said she has been flooded with positive calls and e-mails over the sex ban.

Asked for response in a busy Belgian shopping mall, Florence Willems said: "Why not? We may as well! We don't know what else to do to get a government."

With policy at a dead end and projects put on hold as a caretaker government deals with daily business, citizens have taken initiatives but see no response.

"Despite all these often novel forms of pressure, a solution seems a long way off," said political scientist Pascal Delwit in the daily Le Soir.

Talk-shows and comics compare the situation in Tunisia, where street protests downed the regime, to events in Belgium, where popular frustration is going unheard.

"The birds are singing, the grass is green, all is quiet here, nothing has changed," said breakfast-hour comic Thomas Gunzig after a mass protest in Brussels last month organized over Facebook by a group of students.

As Belgium headed towards the dubious record of becoming the world's country longest without a government -- currently held by Iraq in 2009 at 289 days -- 35,000 people erupted into the streets waving Belgian flags and shouting "Shame!" at the politicians.

Asked whether the sex boycott could impact, Temmerman said: "I don't think many women are going to practice abstinence, or that it'll have an effect, but it's better to laugh."

As for herself? "My husband's in Kenya at the moment so it's easy."
Posted by:Fred

#9  Well, it looks like nobody's getting laid in Belgium for a long while.
But it's not like anyone outside of Belgium cares...
Posted by: tu3031   2011-02-11 18:59  

#8  This has the air of an ancient Greek farce.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2011-02-11 11:50  

#7  "When a situation's dire and nothing's moving, either you become a cynic or you react with humor," said Marleen Temmerman, the Belgian senator and gynecologist who threw up the notion

Isn't pregnancy and essential part of how a gynecologist earns his money?
Posted by: JFM   2011-02-11 10:37  

#6  I wonder if this non-government is still collecting taxes.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2011-02-11 10:17  

#5  They probably figure that if middle-aged and older men no longer have to shave or have sex, they will be so much more relaxed and happy that they will be amenable to reaching an agreement.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2011-02-11 09:10  

#4  Belgiums noticed they had no government? Wow, who knew?
Posted by: DarthVader   2011-02-11 09:01  

#3  Its encouraging to know a western democracy is being run by a bunch of high school athletic supporters trying to win the next big game.
Posted by: BrerRabbit   2011-02-11 07:52  

#2  If it's good enough for Sudan, it's good enough for Belgium.
Posted by: gromky   2011-02-11 01:28  

#1  I've got an idea: why not just shave, have sex, and then break up the country? The world won't mourn the loss of Belgium.
Posted by: Secret Master   2011-02-11 00:59  

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