Corporate Europe Observatory

Exposing the power of corporate lobbying in the EU

Mr. Walden Bello, Member of Philippine Parliament, denied entry to Belgium.

  • Dansk
  • Nederlands
  • English
  • Français
  • Deutsch
  • Ελληνικά
  • Italiano
  • Portuguese
  • Español
  • Svenska
May 5th 2012
Printer-friendly versionSend by emailPDF version

A Statement by Corporate Europe Observatory and the Transnational Institute

 

Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) and the Transnational Institute (TNI) express their indignation at the decision of the Belgian Immigration to deny entry to Mr. Walden Bello, who has been invited as a panelist to a two-day International Conference on Europe in Brussels. Mr. Bello, an elected Representative of the Philippine Parliament, Chairperson of the Philippine Parliamentary Committee on Overseas Workers’ Affairs and Associate of TNI, arrived at Zaventem airport from Newark, New Jersey in the morning of May 4 aboard United Airlines on a diplomatic passport. At immigration control, he was informed that a visa is also required for him to enter Belgium, notwithstanding existing Schengen-member policy that grants visa exemptions to holders of diplomatic passports.

The final decision to deny him entry came from the Ministry of the Interior despite interventions by the Protocol Office of the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Philippine Embassy, and the Flemish coalition of development organizations (11.11.11) who intervened to request a border visa for Mr. Bello. Mr. Bello was then immediately ushered to the first flight headed to the United States--to Chicago instead of New Jersey.

CEO and TNI strongly protest this denial of entry to Mr. Bello. The unilateral decision by the Ministry of the Interior is completely unacceptable and contrary to the obligation of the Belgian government as the seat of the EU Institutions. We demand an explanation from the Belgian Ministry of the Interior about this refusal of entry—given the solid evidence of Mr. Bello’s intention to return to the United States, where he is currently teaching at the University of Binghamton, and the overwhelming support of the Philippine Embassy that vouched for his person.

This withholding of a border visa for Mr. Bello, which could have been issued and indeed had been requested for him by the immediate immigration officials, raises serious questions as to what grounds and on what basis citizens of other countries are assessed at the EU borders and who, ultimately, makes these decisions. This treatment of such a public figure as Mr. Bello raises more fundamental questions about the Belgian government’s and the EU’s border policy and its treatment of ordinary citizens of countries outside the EU who have no recourse for appeal or action.

Attached you find a statement from Walden Bello

 Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) and the Transnational Institute (TNI) express their indignation at the decision of the Belgian Immigration to deny entry to Mr. Walden Bello, who has been invited as a panelist to a two-day International Conference on Europe in Brussels. Mr. Bello, an elected Representative of the Philippine Parliament, Chairperson of the Philippine Parliamentary Committee on Overseas Workers’ Affairs and Associate of TNI, arrived at Zaventem airport from Newark, New Jersey in the morning of May 4 aboard United Airlines on a diplomatic passport. At immigration control, he was informed that a visa is also required for him to enter Belgium, notwithstanding existing Schengen-member policy that grants visa exemptions to holders of diplomatic passports.The final decision to deny him entry came from the Ministry of the Interior despite interventions by the Protocol Office of the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Philippine Embassy, and the Flemish coalition of development organizations (11.11.11) who intervened to request a border visa for Mr. Bello. Mr. Bello was then immediately ushered to the first flight headed to the United States--to Chicago instead of New Jersey.CEO and TNI strongly protest this denial of entry to Mr. Bello. The unilateral decision by the Ministry of the Interior is completely unacceptable and contrary to the obligation of the Belgian government as the seat of the EU Institutions. We demand an explanation from the Belgian Ministry of the Interior about this refusal of entry—given the solid evidence of Mr. Bello’s intention to return to the United States, where he is currently teaching at the University of Binghamton, and the overwhelming support of the Philippine Embassy that vouched for his person.This withholding of a border visa for Mr. Bello, which could have been issued and indeed had been requested for him by the immediate immigration officials, raises serious questions as to what grounds and on what basis citizens of other countries are assessed at the EU borders and who, ultimately, makes these decisions. This treatment of such a public figure as Mr. Bello raises more fundamental questions about the Belgian government’s and the EU’s border policy and its treatment of ordinary citizens of countries outside the EU who have no recourse for appeal or action.Attached you find a statement from Walden Bello
 
To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Similar entries

EU in crisis - another Europe is possible

Activists, campaigners, trade unionists and individuals joined together to call for a halt to the EU's Austerity Treaty at the two-day EU in Crisis conference, organised by Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) and the Transnational Institute to mark CEO's 15th anniversary.

Activist and writer, Susan George emphasised the anti-democratic nature of the austerity agenda, which has been imposed without debate or electoral support.

‘Responsible soy’ nominated for Belgian Greenwash award

At the event, 'Silence of the Panda' by Wilfried Huismann was screened for the first time in Belgium. This film, currently forbidden in Germany, focuses on the pro-industry strategies followed by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), accused by many of helping corpotations to greenwash their image with flawed ‘green’ labels. Parts of the movie are available on youtube.

EU in crisis - the conference

Some 300 people joined CEO and TNI for the two day conference at the start of May on the EU in Crisis: analysis, resistances and alternatives to corporate Europe. The conference triggered the launch of a new pan-European network to fight EU austerity; there was a joint statement from the conference; and links were built to support a range of different campaigns. Watch online footage from the conference, read feedback from participants and find out more about what went on.

Citizens coalition or industry frontgroup? Covert lobby for shale gas enters European Parliament

On Wednesday 21 November all members of the European Parliament were due in the plenary room of the Strasbourg Parliament headquarters to vote on two reports on shale gas. The day before an exhibition was set up across from the plenary room to convince MEPs that shale gas has no environmental risks and needs no further regulation. What was not visible was that the group co-organising the exhibition and subsequent reception, the Responsible Energy Citizens Coalition (RECC), is a front group for big companies with commercial interest in shale gas development, such as Polish PGNiG.

CEO supports today's strike in Belgium

The strike organised by Belgian trade unions today is a very important statement against the austerity policies that are currently introduced in Belgium and across Europe, causing social injustice and deepening the economic crisis. The unions very clearly emphasise the problematic role of the EU which, as the ABVV-FGTB union states, "forces the member states into a blind austerity policy". The strike happens on the day where EU leaders meet for a two-day summit in Brussels to agree on a new EU treaty that will take further sweeping steps in imposing rigid budget discipline and austerity policies across the continent. Strikes like the one today and other forms of citizens' protests are exactly what is needed to save European welfare states and prevent the crisis from spiralling out of control.

Pages

The Brussels Business: Who runs the EU?

Corporate Europe Observatory

Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) is a research and campaign group working to expose and challenge the privileged access and influence enjoyed by corporations and their lobby groups in EU policy making.

Read more

Creative Commons License
All content on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Corporate Europe Forum