Hadja Lahbib | |
---|---|
Minister of Foreign Affairs | |
Assumed office 15 July 2022 | |
Prime Minister | Alexander De Croo |
Preceded by | Sophie Wilmès |
Personal details | |
Born | Boussu, Belgium | 21 June 1970
Political party | MR |
Occupation |
|
Hadja Lahbib (born 21 June 1970) is a Belgian journalist, TV presenter, director and politician, serving as the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Belgium since July 2022.
Francophone Hadja Lahbib was born on 21 June 1970 in Boussu, near the city of Mons, to a family of Algerian Kabyles. [1] [2]
Lahbib graduated in journalism from the Free University of Brussels and worked for a long time for the Belgian Radio-Television of the French Community ( RTBF). In particular, she was a special correspondent in Afghanistan and the Middle East, and presented the television news for two decades. In May 2013, she presented the final of the Queen Elisabeth Competition, but she refused explicitly to mention the winner had Israeli nationality. [3]
Lahbib visited politically disputed Crimea between Russia and Ukraine in July 2021. [4] She did not tell how exactly she got there and did not recognize Crimea as the territory of Ukraine. [4] She went to the "Global Values" festival, which is organized by the Sevastopol Academic Russian Drama Theater named after Lunacharsky and organized by Katerina Tikhonova, daughter of Vladimir Putin. [4] [5] In 2021, it was held on 23–25 July. On Instagram, she published fragments of a choreographic performance from the festival. After the trip, she was asked by RTBF whether she was coming back from Russia or Ukraine. Lahbib did not answer clearly, but said: "To land at Simferopol airport, a Russian visa is required." [4] [6] [7]
In her capacity as Foreign Minister, she condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine, expressed full support for Ukraine [8] and called the occupation of Crimea illegal. [9]
Prior to her appointment as foreign minister on 15 July 2022, Lahbib was only politically active with the socialist organisation, Solidaris, and she was not a member of the liberal Reformist Movement (MR), whose leader Georges-Louis Bouchez unexpectedly nominated her for the post of Belgian Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs to replace Sophie Wilmès. She took the oath before King Philippe on the same day. At the press conference at which she was introduced, she said about her political position:
"I am not left, not right, but fundamentally free". [10] [11]
After the interview, Georges-Louis Bouchez asked her to join MR, and she did so.
On 7 October 2022, Lahbib and two lawmakers – Darya Safai and Goedele Liekens – cut their hair in parliament, in solidarity with anti-government demonstrations in Iran triggered by the death in police custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini. [12]
On 26 November 2022, Lahbib and prime minister Alexander De Croo visited Ukraine. [13]
In June 2023, Lahbib won a vote of no-confidence in parliament after granting visas to delegations from Iranian and Russian cities to attend a mayors' convention in Brussels earlier that month. Her MR party had threatened to leave the government if she had to resign, which would have made the government collapse. [14]
She also became the centre of a scandal in June 2024, when Belgium abstained at the WHO on a vote regarding the Israeli hostages [15] whereby her Cabinet didn't act. [16]
Media related to Hadja Lahbib at Wikimedia Commons
Hadja Lahbib | |
---|---|
Minister of Foreign Affairs | |
Assumed office 15 July 2022 | |
Prime Minister | Alexander De Croo |
Preceded by | Sophie Wilmès |
Personal details | |
Born | Boussu, Belgium | 21 June 1970
Political party | MR |
Occupation |
|
Hadja Lahbib (born 21 June 1970) is a Belgian journalist, TV presenter, director and politician, serving as the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Belgium since July 2022.
Francophone Hadja Lahbib was born on 21 June 1970 in Boussu, near the city of Mons, to a family of Algerian Kabyles. [1] [2]
Lahbib graduated in journalism from the Free University of Brussels and worked for a long time for the Belgian Radio-Television of the French Community ( RTBF). In particular, she was a special correspondent in Afghanistan and the Middle East, and presented the television news for two decades. In May 2013, she presented the final of the Queen Elisabeth Competition, but she refused explicitly to mention the winner had Israeli nationality. [3]
Lahbib visited politically disputed Crimea between Russia and Ukraine in July 2021. [4] She did not tell how exactly she got there and did not recognize Crimea as the territory of Ukraine. [4] She went to the "Global Values" festival, which is organized by the Sevastopol Academic Russian Drama Theater named after Lunacharsky and organized by Katerina Tikhonova, daughter of Vladimir Putin. [4] [5] In 2021, it was held on 23–25 July. On Instagram, she published fragments of a choreographic performance from the festival. After the trip, she was asked by RTBF whether she was coming back from Russia or Ukraine. Lahbib did not answer clearly, but said: "To land at Simferopol airport, a Russian visa is required." [4] [6] [7]
In her capacity as Foreign Minister, she condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine, expressed full support for Ukraine [8] and called the occupation of Crimea illegal. [9]
Prior to her appointment as foreign minister on 15 July 2022, Lahbib was only politically active with the socialist organisation, Solidaris, and she was not a member of the liberal Reformist Movement (MR), whose leader Georges-Louis Bouchez unexpectedly nominated her for the post of Belgian Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs to replace Sophie Wilmès. She took the oath before King Philippe on the same day. At the press conference at which she was introduced, she said about her political position:
"I am not left, not right, but fundamentally free". [10] [11]
After the interview, Georges-Louis Bouchez asked her to join MR, and she did so.
On 7 October 2022, Lahbib and two lawmakers – Darya Safai and Goedele Liekens – cut their hair in parliament, in solidarity with anti-government demonstrations in Iran triggered by the death in police custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini. [12]
On 26 November 2022, Lahbib and prime minister Alexander De Croo visited Ukraine. [13]
In June 2023, Lahbib won a vote of no-confidence in parliament after granting visas to delegations from Iranian and Russian cities to attend a mayors' convention in Brussels earlier that month. Her MR party had threatened to leave the government if she had to resign, which would have made the government collapse. [14]
She also became the centre of a scandal in June 2024, when Belgium abstained at the WHO on a vote regarding the Israeli hostages [15] whereby her Cabinet didn't act. [16]
Media related to Hadja Lahbib at Wikimedia Commons