Belgium makes Depardieu honorary citizen, celebrates it with T-bone barbecue

Belgium makes Depardieu honorary citizen, celebrates it with T-bone barbecue

NECHIN, Belgium - Agence France-Presse
Belgium makes Depardieu honorary citizen, celebrates it with T-bone barbecue

French actor Gerard Depardieu (C) wearing a sling of the Satcheux brotherhood poses Estaimpuis' mayor Daniel Senesael (L) during a ceremony held in his honor at the Chateau Bourgogne in Estaimpuis on Aug. 24. AFP photo

Authorities in the Belgian municipality of Estaimpuis made their most famous resident, Gerard Depardieu, an honorary citizen on Aug. 24 ahead of a housewarming barbecue the French actor is due to host.

"We are pleased that you have made Nechin your home," local official Daniel Senesael said, referring to the village where Depardieu bought a house last year, before praising the film star for staying true to himself.

"Gerard, Estaimpuis loves you," he said at the ceremony held at a 12th-century chateau.

In front of the redbrick chteau with a moat where the ceremony was held in his honour, Depardieu told journalists that life in Nechin was "perfect" and described himself as a "citizen of the world." "I have worked around the world but I settled in Nechin," he added.

Depardieu will host a giant barbecue for 200, including his new neighbours, to celebrate moving into the house in Nechin, near the border with France.

T-bone feast

Local butcher Marc Vens, who is catering the party, told the RTL-TV1 network that T-bone steaks and suckling pig were on the menu.

Around a quarter of the residents of Nechin, part of the Estampuis municipality, are French and are usually wealthy, attracted to the spot by Belgium's more generous tax laws.

Depardieu, 64, stirred up controversy when he decided to take up residency across the border after the Socialist government sought to impose a 75 percent tax rate on annual incomes over one million euros ($1.3 million).

After buying the house in Nechin, Depardieu was granted Russian citizenship by President Vladimir Putin. The move was criticised, as were his friendships with Putin and Chechnya's strongman leader Ramzan Kadyrov.

The veteran actor told France's Figaro magazine on Friday that the controversy had been "a big misunderstanding" and that he still loved France.

"I am a free man. I feel at home everywhere in Europe." "This whole story is a big misunderstanding," he said, adding: "I love France as much as ever. It's my country." Hailed as one of the greatest actors of his generation, Depardieu starred in films including "Cyrano de Bergerac" and the "Asterix & Obelix" series and also owns a number of businesses including vineyards.

But in recent years Depardieu has also become known for his off-screen antics. He landed a fine earlier this year for drink-driving and in 2011 generated global headlines when he tried to urinate in a bottle aboard a plane as it prepared to take off from Paris for Dublin.