You're reading: Belgian king to address nation amid abdication speculation

Belgium's King Albert II will give a televised address to the nation on Wednesday, the royal palace said, amid frenzied speculation in the local media that the 79-year-old monarch will step down.

“The core council of ministers has convened in the presence
of the king. The king will speak to the people at 1800 (1600
GMT) via a radio and television address,” the palace said in a
statement.

Local newspapers, quoting government sources, reported that
the monarch would announce his resignation. The government
scheduled a press conference for 15 minutes after the speech.

If it happens, the abdication would come only six months
after Queen Beatrix of the neighbouring Netherlands announced
she would vacate the Dutch throne in favour of her son Willem
Alexander.

While the Belgian monarch has no executive powers and plays
a largely ceremonial role, he is a rare uniting factor in an
otherwise divided country, which in recent years has seen more
and more powers given to regional governments.

Albert II, who has three children, ascended to the throne in
1993 when his childless brother Baudouin passed away.

His son Philippe, 53, is next in line to the throne in the
small nation where European Union headquarters are located.

In 1999 Belgian media reported that Albert had fathered a
fourth child, a daughter, in an extramarital affair in the
1960s. The palace never acknowledged this.

Delphine Boel, who says she is the unrecognised daughter,
summoned the monarch and two of his children to appear in a
Brussels court in June, according to her lawyer.

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