Paul Vanden Boeynants

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Paul Emile François Henri Vanden Boeynants (May 22, 1919January 9, 2001) was a Belgian politician. He served as prime minister of Belgium for two brief periods (1966-68 and 1978-79).

Vanden Boeynants (called "VDB" by journalists) was born in Forest, a municipality in the Brussels-Capital Region. He was active in the meat-industry, and was a Representative for the PSC-CVP between 1949 and 1979. He lead the PSC-CVP between 1961 and 1966 (then still a unitary party). Vanden Boeynants became Prime Minister of Belgium in 1966 and served as prime minister until 1968. Later in 1978, he led another Belgian government which lasted until 1979. He left politics in 1995, and died of pneumonia after undergoing cardiovascular surgery in 2001.

[edit] Fraud

In 1986, Vanden Boeynants was convicted for fraud and tax evasion, and sentenced to three years probation. This prevented him from pursuing mayoral aspirations in Brussels. He was rehabilitated in the early-1990s.

[edit] Kidnapping

Vanden Boeynants was kidnapped on January 14, 1989 by members of the Haemers criminal gang. Three days later, the criminals published a note in the newspaper Le Soir, demanding 30 million Belgian francs in ransom. Vanden Boeynants was released a month later, on February 13, when an undisclosed ransom was paid to the perpetrators. Patrick Haemers, head of the gang, later committed suicide in prison, although two members of his gang managed to escape from the St-Gillis Prison in 1993.

Political offices


Preceded by
Pierre Harmel
Prime Minister of Belgium
1966-1968
Succeeded by
Gaston Eyskens
Preceded by
Paul Willem Segers
Belgian Minister of Defense
1972-1979
Succeeded by
José Desmarets
Preceded by
Leo Tindemans
Prime Minister of Belgium
1978-1979
Succeeded by
Wilfried Martens