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Feb 8, 2026

Pro-Kurdish march closes streets around EU Quarter, prompting police advice for business travellers

Pro-Kurdish march closes streets around EU Quarter, prompting police advice for business travellers
Traffic in Brussels’ European Quarter ground to a halt on Saturday afternoon, 7 February, as some 150 demonstrators gathered at Patrice-Lumumba Square before marching to Place du Luxembourg outside the European Parliament. Organised by several Belgian-Kurdish associations, the rally called for the release of Abdullah Öcalan and greater autonomy for Kurdish regions in the Middle East.

The procession followed a rolling road-block escorted by Brussels-Capital/Ixelles police. Officers diverted buses and trams along Rue Belliard and instituted intermittent closures on Rue de la Loi, one of the main arteries linking the city centre to Brussels Airport. Although the march remained peaceful, police advised motorists and taxi operators to avoid the area between 14:00 and 17:00 CET.

The demonstration was the nineteenth in less than three weeks, reflecting a pattern of serial, short-notice protests that have become a fixture of the capital’s political calendar. For multinational firms with offices near the EU institutions, the cumulative effect is felt in lost productivity, missed Eurostar connections and longer transfer times for visiting executives. Several hotels along Avenue de la Toison d’Or reported early check-ins delayed as coaches were rerouted.

Pro-Kurdish march closes streets around EU Quarter, prompting police advice for business travellers


While no border measures were triggered, Belgium’s immigration office confirmed that ad-hoc ID checks inside Schuman metro were taking place “as a precaution.” Mobility managers should therefore remind foreign assignees to carry passports or national ID cards when moving around the EU Quarter. Employers planning client events or relocation orientations next week are advised to build in tactical flexibility and monitor the city’s real-time traffic platform (Mobiris) for protest alerts.

Corporate travel teams facing such fluid conditions may also need fast, reliable visa support. VisaHQ offers up-to-date advice on Belgian entry rules, can expedite Schengen applications and provides status tracking online—see https://www.visahq.com/belgium/ for details.

City authorities, meanwhile, stress that the right to protest is constitutionally protected and say they are working with organisers to keep future marches on defined routes to minimise disruption. However, with further “Freedom for Kurdistan” actions promised, Brussels looks set for more stop-start weekends—an unwelcome headache for the global mobility teams that rely on smooth ground logistics.
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