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Belgium’s transgender deputy prime minister targeted by far-right

Petra De Sutter came under attack just days after being appointed Belgium’s deputy prime minister

David Harding
Thursday 08 October 2020 04:58 EDT
Belgium Transgender Politician
Belgium Transgender Politician

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Belgium’s first transgender politician to be appointed as the country’s deputy prime minister has been attacked by the far-right just days after being sworn into office.

Petra De Sutter was formally appointed in her new role last weekend, making her the highest-ranking transgender politician in Europe.

But although her appointment was applauded by many for breaking new ground, it has not pleased everybody, including critics in the regional parliament of her native Flanders in northern Belgium.

Bart Claes of the Flemish Interest party posted on Facebook that De Sutter “wants to destroy and replace all cornerstones of our Western civilization".

Claes also claimed in a tweet that De Sutter was “the personification of cultural Marxism”.

The remarks were immediately criticised.

De Sutter's party colleague, Bjorn Rzoska, decried attempts to “dehumanize her".

And Liesbeth Homans, speaker of the Flemish parliament said she found Claes' comments “extremely reprehensible”, while at the same time defending free speech.

Claes, however, would not back down and took to Facebook again to claim that:  “I don't see the problem. I said that a transgender… is a transgender."

De Sutter, a professor specializing in gynecology and fertility, was previously a MEP until last year.

On being appointed deputy prime minister - she also serves as public administration minister - De Sutter said she was “proud that in (Belgium) and in most of (the EU) your gender identity does not define you as a person and is a non-issue".

“I hope that my appointment as Minister and Deputy PM can trigger the debate in countries where this is not yet the case," she wrote on Twitter.

De Sutter is a Green MP and is part of the newly-formed Belgian coalition government led by liberal Prime Minister,  Alexander de Croo.

His appointment at the end of last month ended a period of Belgium being without a fully-functioning government for 16 months.

With AP

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