Brussels – Latest News https://latestnews.top Wed, 13 Sep 2023 20:36:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://latestnews.top/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-licon-32x32.png Brussels – Latest News https://latestnews.top 32 32 Moment Irish tourist damages statue outside Brussels Stock Exchange the day after it was https://latestnews.top/moment-irish-tourist-damages-statue-outside-brussels-stock-exchange-the-day-after-it-was/ https://latestnews.top/moment-irish-tourist-damages-statue-outside-brussels-stock-exchange-the-day-after-it-was/#respond Wed, 13 Sep 2023 20:36:28 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/09/13/moment-irish-tourist-damages-statue-outside-brussels-stock-exchange-the-day-after-it-was/ Moment Irish tourist damages statue outside Brussels Stock Exchange the day after it was unveiled following £15,000 restoration Irishman was arrested after snapping off part of ‘the hand with a torch’ statue Stock Exchange had just undergone £77m restoration, including work to statue Do you know who the tourist is? Email tips@dailymail.com By Elena Salvoni Published: 10:32 […]]]>


Moment Irish tourist damages statue outside Brussels Stock Exchange the day after it was unveiled following £15,000 restoration

  • Irishman was arrested after snapping off part of ‘the hand with a torch’ statue
  • Stock Exchange had just undergone £77m restoration, including work to statue
  • Do you know who the tourist is? Email tips@dailymail.com

An Irishman has been arrested in Brussels after breaking off part of a statue outside the city’s Stock Exchange – which had just cost £15,000 to restore.

The building, known as the Bourse, was reopened just a day before the incident on Sunday, following a three-year £77million restoration project.

Shocking video shows the man, who appears to be drunk, climbing up the statue, which is called ‘the hand with a torch’ and is one of two which flank the entrance.

Astonished crowds watched as he clambered on to the sculpture, which depicts a lion and a man holding a torch.

As he goes to dismount the artwork, he grabs on to it to steady himself, snapping the torch and what appears to be part of the arm off as he jumps to the ground. 

Astonished crowds watched as he clambered on to the sculpture, which depicts a lion and a man holding a torch

Astonished crowds watched as he clambered on to the sculpture, which depicts a lion and a man holding a torch

Video taken of the incident on Sunday shows the man appearing to steady himself by holding onto the statue's arm

Video taken of the incident on Sunday shows the man appearing to steady himself by holding onto the statue’s arm

The man is thought to have been intercepted by police in a nearby fast food restaurant soon after and arrested. 

The Stock Exchange now wants to recoup the thousands in damages directly from the man, Belgian media reports.

Nel Vandevennet, who managed the restoration project, told outlet VRT NWS: ‘The repairs are going to cost a lot of money because the work will have to be done by real craftsmen.

‘It is listed heritage and there will be follow-up from the monuments and landscapes agency of the Brussels region.’

The torch and what appears to be part of the arm of the statue clatters to the floor as the man makes his way down

The torch and what appears to be part of the arm of the statue clatters to the floor as the man makes his way down 

The torch and what appears to be part of the arm of the statue clatters to the floor as the man makes his way down

The tourist looks down as he realises he’s knocked part of the statue off 

Pictures show the statue in a state of disrepair before it was restored. Now, it will need to be worked on again

Pictures show the statue in a state of disrepair before it was restored. Now, it will need to be worked on again

The reopening of the landmark has been highly anticipated in the Belgian city, with guided tours being put on as tourists are welcomed back

The reopening of the landmark has been highly anticipated in the Belgian city, with guided tours being put on as tourists are welcomed back

Pictures show the erosion suffered by the stone statue before it was restored. Now, it will need to be worked on again. 

‘We would like to carry out the repairs quickly, but it will surely take a few weeks or even months,’ said Vandevennet.

‘The whole building has only just been restored to its former glory, including the two lions which were in a bad way. 

‘We thought the sculptures would enjoy greater respect. We just think it’s very sad this happened.’

The reopening of the landmark has been highly anticipated in the Belgian city, with guided tours being put on as tourists are welcomed back. 

It is not the only attraction to have suffered damage from tourists this summer, with Rome’s Colosseum targeted by a holidaymaker in June.

Ivan Dimitrov, 27, who also goes by the name Ivan Hawkins, was caught on camera by an American tourist as he carved the words, ‘Ivan and Hayley 23’ into the brickwork with a set of keys.

Then in July, a 17-year-old Swiss girl was also caught carving into the walls of the ancient amphitheatre.



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Belgium’s medieval marvels: Brussels, Ghent and Bruges can all be reached by rail from https://latestnews.top/belgiums-medieval-marvels-brussels-ghent-and-bruges-can-all-be-reached-by-rail-from/ https://latestnews.top/belgiums-medieval-marvels-brussels-ghent-and-bruges-can-all-be-reached-by-rail-from/#respond Sat, 19 Aug 2023 04:24:15 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/08/19/belgiums-medieval-marvels-brussels-ghent-and-bruges-can-all-be-reached-by-rail-from/ Ghent is not the first place you think of for a cutting-edge, virtual reality experience. This beautiful city by the banks of the rivers Lys and Scheldt is far more famous for its elegant medieval buildings that rise above the flat Flanders countryside like a Flemish Oxford. But its gargantuan St Bavo’s Cathedral offers just […]]]>


Ghent is not the first place you think of for a cutting-edge, virtual reality experience. This beautiful city by the banks of the rivers Lys and Scheldt is far more famous for its elegant medieval buildings that rise above the flat Flanders countryside like a Flemish Oxford.

But its gargantuan St Bavo’s Cathedral offers just that: a futuristic tour through the history of the city’s most famous artwork, The Adoration Of The Mystic Lamb.

The whole thing feels positively Star Trek. Wearing headgear, you wander through the old cloisters and learn about the story of the famous altarpiece. Via the headset, whole townscapes unfold before your eyes, bishops pop up in scarlet robes, as do the artists behind the paintings. It’s hugely impressive – and a good metaphor for the town itself, which mixes the historic and the contemporary with a pleasing dose of quirkiness.

Ghent is the second stop on our three-city tour, sandwiched by Brussels and Bruges. Journeys between each city take no more than an hour, so it’s easy to pack in all three in less than a week, and our return Eurostar’s ‘Any Belgian Station’ ticket – which takes us from the UK to Brussels, on to another city and back – covers two of our three journeys within the country already.

It’s raining when we arrive in Brussels, a damp, blurry evening – but we dive into Aux Armes de Bruxelles, a buzzy brasserie serving an unctuous seafood gratin packed with mussels and chunks of fish. A mix of tourists and locals happily put away carafes of local wine (made more memorable by the at-table flambe of a crepe Suzette almost setting the curtains on fire).

Annabelle Thorpe goes on a multi-city tour of Belgium, stopping off in Brussels, Ghent and Bruges. Above is Ghent's centre

Annabelle Thorpe goes on a multi-city tour of Belgium, stopping off in Brussels, Ghent and Bruges. Above is Ghent’s centre 

Annabelle checks into The Juliana Hotel Brussels (above), where room-only doubles are priced from £220

Annabelle checks into The Juliana Hotel Brussels (above), where room-only doubles are priced from £220

With only half a day in Brussels, we tick off the big hitters, starting with the ornate guildhalls and palaces that line the Grand Place, one of the most impressive medieval squares in Europe.

It’s busy with tourists and tour guides waving umbrellas like harassed shepherds. But the crowds don’t detract from the intricate beauty of the buildings, with flags fluttering in the breeze.

We head on to the Royal Museum of Fine Arts to marvel at the paintings by Brueghel, seething with life and fury, and the calm stillness of works by Gauguin and Magritte. You could spend a week here and not see all of its extraordinary art collection, but by lunchtime the train is calling and we head to Brussels-Midi for our train to Ghent.

Splendour: On her visit to Ghent, Annabelle visits the 'gargantuan' St Bavo’s Cathedral

Splendour: On her visit to Ghent, Annabelle visits the ‘gargantuan’ St Bavo’s Cathedral 

Annabelle says that the Grand Place (above) in Brussels is 'one of the most impressive medieval squares in Europe'

Annabelle says that the Grand Place (above) in Brussels is ‘one of the most impressive medieval squares in Europe’

Once there, we wander down to the historic centre, where the river Lys is flanked by houses dating from the 13th Century, when Ghent was one of the most prosperous cities in northern Europe.

Famed for its luxury cloth, the merchants’ wealth has left a rich legacy of medieval architecture that gives the town the feel of an open air museum.

The next day, after our unexpected venture into virtual reality, we hop on one of the boats that navigate Ghent’s lattice of canals. As we drift along the quiet backwaters, I marvel again at how somewhere so beautiful remains so blissfully peaceful. Perhaps it’s because the majority of tourists speed past Ghent, heading to Bruges, arguably Europe’s most famous medieval town.

Annabelle learns that Bruges (above) was almost entirely rebuilt in the late 19th Century after falling into a state of disrepair

Annabelle learns that Bruges (above) was almost entirely rebuilt in the late 19th Century after falling into a state of disrepair

After the short train ride there we join a walking tour where we learn that Bruges was almost entirely rebuilt in the late 19th Century after falling into a state of disrepair. The decision was taken to re-create the buildings as they would have looked during medieval times, making the city one of the world’s first tourist destinations.

We drink cold beers in a cafe on the central Markt. We wander about the little lanes, enjoying the romance of the setting. We dip into the city’s fascinating history in the Gruuthuse Museum.

Yet as the train spins back to Brussels, we agree that Ghent was the highlight. There’s a quirkiness to the city, with its bohemian backstreet quarters, dimly-lit bars and unexpected virtual reality tours.

An ideal mix of history, culture and sinfully-good food, much like Belgium itself.

TRAVEL FACTS

Annabelle Thorpe was a guest of Eurostar, whose ‘Any Belgium Station’ tickets cost from £49 one-way (eurostar.com). Room-only doubles at The Juliana Hotel Brussels (juliana-brussels.com), from £220, at The Yalo Urban Boutique Hotel in Ghent (yalohotel.com) from £132 and at the Hotel Dukes’ Arches in Bruges (dukesarches.com) from £140. Find more information at visitflanders.com.



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