‘Slave market’ demo in Brussels turns violent

‘Slave market’ demo in Brussels turns violent

BRUSSELS
‘Slave market’ demo in Brussels turns violent

Fifty people were arrested in Brussels on Nov. 25 after police officers were attacked and shops damaged on the margins of a protest over the recent revelations of migrant slave markets in Libya, authorities said.

A group of people broke off from the demonstration against slavery in Libya before putting on masks and turning violent.

The incidents occurred in the busy commercial neighborhood around Place Louise near the Belgian capital’s city center, police spokesman Ilse Van de Keere told AFP.

Brussels police posted on Twitter: “50 people [were] arrested and (there are) no injuries to be noted.”

According to the RTBF public broadcaster, those arrested during the violence were aged between 15 and 18.

A police car was also targeted and projectiles were thrown, Van de Keere said. A large number of officers were deployed and calm was restored by the early evening.

Third violance in few weeks

The U.S. network CNN triggered a wave of condemnation when it aired footage last week of an apparent auction where black men were presented to North African buyers as potential farmhands and sold.

This is the third time that violence erupts in Brussels in a few weeks.

On Nov. 15, an unauthorized rally organized by a young social media star escalated when the police tried to disperse the crowd.

Four days earlier, there was violence after Morocco’s qualification for the 2018 football World Cup.