Brussels is on edge as a Canada-inspired "freedom convoy" is expected to descend on the city, threatening to disrupt the centre in open defiance of a ban issued by the public authorities.
The protest movement opposes anti-coronavirus restrictions and vaccination mandates, as well as soaring energy prices, and follows the example of similar demonstrations that had taken place in Canada, the US, the Netherlands, and already reached Paris.
In choosing Brussels, the city that hosts most EU institutions, as their next destination, protesters intend to elevate their grievances to a European level.
Over 1,300 vehicles gathered on Sunday in Lille, France, close to the Belgian border, to prepare for their journey towards Brussels.
Police are carrying out checks at key entry points between Brussels and Flanders to identify and filter out possible disruptors, according to reports from local media.
Those identified as protesters are being re-directed to the site of the Brussels Expo, in the north of the city, where a "static demonstration" is being allowed.
The increase in security and surveillance comes four days after Belgian authorities issued a ban on the protest, arguing the participants did not file the necessary request.
In a joint statement released on Thursday, Belgian Interior Minister Annelies Verlinden, Brussels-Capital Region Minister-President Rudi Vervoort and Brussels City Mayor Philippe Close said they were mobilising federal, regional and local resources to prevent the capital from being blocked by the convoy and minimise disruption for ordinary residents and commuters.
"So far we have spotted 4-500 vehicles [...] cars, motorhomes, small vans. About thirty have been blocked and others have disbanded," Close said on
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