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Belgium, National chapter

Journalists Matter, Council of Europe Campaign for the Safety of Journalists

The Council of Europe encourages member states to transpose the Campaign to the national context. Without each member’s committed and effective effort at national level, through the development of the so-called ‘national chapter’, the Campaign cannot reach its goals.

In this section, we will present developments in Belgium:

National Focal Point

Mr Jimmy LOS, Human Rights Officer, M3 Human Rights Directorate, Federal Public Service for Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation

National Campaign Committee

The National Campaign Committee for the Journalists Matter Campaign in Belgium operates through the national “focal point group”, which serves as the mechanism for coordination and follow-up of the campaign’s implementation at the national level.

Establishment and Functioning:
The first meeting of the focal point group was held on 9 January 2025. The group is officially considered the national structure for monitoring and advancing the objectives of the Journalists Matter Campaign in Belgium. It is fully functional, with the next meeting scheduled for May 2025. In the long term, the group intends to meet at least once every six months, while additional ad hoc meetings may be convened as needed.

Composition and Stakeholders:
The focal point group gathers representatives from all key public administrations concerned with media freedom and journalist safety, namely:

  • Federal Public Service (SPF) Foreign Affairs
  • Federal Public Service (SPF) Justice
  • Federal Public Service (SPF) Interior
  • Federal Police
  • French Community (Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles)
  • Flemish Community
  • German-speaking Community

Role and Cooperation Mechanism:
The focal point group serves as a platform for dialogue and coordination, encouraging regular exchange and information-sharing among participants. It supports collaborative follow-up of Belgian responses to alerts on the Council of Europe Platform for the Protection of Journalism and Safety of Journalists,  and helps ensure consistency between national and international efforts.

Belgium provides a strong constitutional and legal framework for the protection of freedom of expression and the safety of journalists.

Legal and Constitutional Protections

The Belgian Constitution safeguards press freedom and freedom of expression through several key provisions — Articles 19, 25, 32, and 150 — which collectively ensure the right to free communication, public access to information, and freedom of the press.

At the federal level, the Law on the Protection of Journalistic Sources offers robust safeguards against attempts to compel journalists to reveal their sources. It also restricts judicial authorities from taking investigative measures that could indirectly circumvent this protection.

A recent legislative advancement further strengthens journalists’ protection: journalists have been added to the list of persons exercising a societal function in the Criminal Code (Articles 79 and 111 of the forthcoming Penal Code reform). This change means that acts of violence committed against journalists will be subject to more severe penalties, underscoring the public interest in ensuring their safety.

European and Institutional Developments:
On 11 April 2024, the European Parliament adopted a new directive to protect journalists, media professionals, researchers, artists, and human rights defenders from abusive legal proceedings (SLAPPs – Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation). The directive entered into force on 6 May 2024, and Belgium has until 7 May 2026 to transpose it into national law.

In parallel, on 15 December 2022, the Federal Institute for the Protection and Promotion of Human Rights (IFDH) was officially designated as Belgium’s national contact point on SLAPPs to the European Commission, reinforcing the country’s institutional capacity to prevent and respond to judicial harassment targeting journalists.

 

2025 update

Belgium continued to strengthen its multi-level approach to the safety of journalists through coordinated action by federal authorities, communities, journalists’ associations and media stakeholders. Following its inaugural meeting on 9 January 2025, the Belgian focal point group for the Journalists Matter campaign ensured the timely coordination of Belgian responses to alerts published on the Council of Europe Platform for the Safety of Journalists.

Particular attention was given to gender-related threats affecting journalists. Belgium continued supporting international efforts to address technology-facilitated gender-based violence, including through contributions to the study being prepared by the Advisory Committee of the United Nations Human Rights Council following Resolution 56/19. The Belgian contribution specifically identified women journalists as a group disproportionately affected by technology-facilitated gender-based violence and highlighted its chilling effect on freedom of expression and its impact on the right to work.

Belgium also continued preparations for the transposition of the European Union Anti-SLAPP Directive throughout 2025. As part of these efforts, the Federal Institute for the Protection and Promotion of Human Rights participated in the Council of Europe’s Training of Trainers on SLAPPs organised under the Journalists Matter campaign in Prague in October 2025.

The country further strengthened support structures for journalism and media freedom. The Flemish Community continued supporting the Flemish Association of Journalists (VVJ) through a four-year funding agreement and renewed its cooperation with the Pascal Decroos Fund, which promotes independent investigative journalism through grants and support schemes. In 2025, the Flemish Government also concluded a new management agreement with the public service broadcaster VRT, reaffirming its role as a reference for independent, reliable and pluralistic journalism. At the same time, the French Community maintained a range of support mechanisms for journalism, including funding for investigative journalism, self-regulation, professional training, diversity initiatives and measures addressing online violence against journalists.

With the entry into force of most provisions of the European Media Freedom Act (EMFA) on 8 August 2025, Belgium’s Communities initiated the necessary follow-up procedures, including work relating to the independence of public service media and the assessment of media concentrations.

Young people and youth organisations contributed to the preparation of the Flemish Government’s 2026–2029 Media Literacy Action Plan. Organisations including De Ambrassade,...
The Flemish Association of Journalists (VVJ) continued operating its dedicated journalists’ safety mechanism, including a reporting hotline, safety guidance, training...
The Flemish Association of Journalists (VVJ), together with Sensoa, the Universitair Forensisch Centrum, Child Focus and Stop It Now!, developed a comprehensive charter on the...
The Association des Journalistes Professionnels (AJP) continued to strengthen support for journalists through its AJPro continuing professional development programme, which...
BRIEF DESCRIPTION: A hotline to report aggression against journalists, and other education and cooperation initiatives  WEBSITE: https://www.persveilig.be/ ...