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Tributes paid as Queen Fabiola dies at 86

12:07 08/12/2014

Tributes were paid at the weekend to dowager queen Fabiola, who died at home at Stuyvenberg castle in Brussels on Friday. The widow of King Baudouin, she was 86. The government has declared a period of national mourning  until the funeral, which takes place this Friday. All flags on official buildings will be flown at half-mast.

Fabiola de Mora y Aragón was born in Madrid in 1928, the daughter of nobility. She married Baudouin in 1960 after he had been on the throne for nine years. The couple remained childless; all five of the queen’s pregnancies ended in miscarriage. When Baudouin died in 1993, the throne passed to his younger brother Albert.

Fabiola then moved out of the royal palace in Laken to move nearby Stuyvenberg, where both Baudouin and Albert had been born. She lived quietly, outside of the public eye so as not to overshadow the new royal couple.

One exception was her annual appearance at the Queen Elisabeth Music Competition, which she continued to patronise; in later years she was accompanied by Princess, now Queen, Mathilde, who would eventually take over the appearance.

Fabiola’s health declined over the last few years, particularly after a respiratory infection in 2009, from which she never fully recovered. She also suffered from osteoporosis, which made public appearances difficult. She was last seen in public in the summer of 2013 at a remembrance ceremony for her husband.

Her body was due to be transported on Monday morning from Stuyvenberg to Laken, where she will lie in state in the chapel until the funeral on Friday in Brussels’ Sint-Michiels en Sint-Goedele Cathedral.

Her estate – the subject of controversy last year when it appeared her financial advisers had attempted to avoid paying tax – will go to the non-profit Hulpfonds van de Koningin (Queen’s Aid Fund). The fund was set up upon her marriage to collect funds to aid the needy and to finance projects that aim to improve the integration opportunities of young people and their families.

“She made our country shine”

Prime minister Charles Michel issued a statement in which he paid tribute to Fabiola’s work in society and the cultural sector. “Belgium has this evening lost a great queen, who made our country shine on the world stage,” he said.

The Bishops’ Conference of Belgium said that “she wanted to be a mother to all of her countrymen, especially those who had been damaged by life. Our country will forever be grateful to her”.

Flanders’ minister-president, Geert Bourgeois, added: “It is with sorrow that I learned of the death of Her Majesty Queen Fabiola, and I want to express my condolences in the name of the Flemish government. In the first place my thoughts go out to her family and close friends.”

Former federal minister Willy Claes described her as “the ideal partner for King Baudouin, who saw his monarchy as a real vocation. Fabiola was able to motivate him a great deal. She was absolutely the wife he needed. I would almost go so far as to say they were the perfect couple”.

Written by Alan Hope

Comments

Mikek1300gt

Her advisors tried to avoid tax? Ah, perhaps she did go native. Now, if anybody can tell me how she sent MILLIONS of Belgian taxpayers money to her family in Spain, tax free and it was totally legal, I'm all ears.

Second thoughts. don't.

Dec 8, 2014 20:20
acsonline

@Mikak13 -- Any of your business?... A royal yourself, are you? Or a mere aristocrat riding in triumph through Persepolis? -- Second thoughts: don't.

Dec 9, 2014 11:23
Mikek1300gt

Yes, parasitic royals avoiding tax and sending millions tax free to their family in a foreign country is my business.

Or at least was......

Dec 9, 2014 16:07
acsonline

@ Mikak 13 ---Bloody Hell! Time to restore the place to moral high-ground, you might say. I was always told to show a bit of respect for the deceased, somehow, when they have been known to do a lot of good...

Dec 9, 2014 16:40
AJ

ACSONLINE - This is known as a "comments board". People are free to write their opinions on here as long they are not grossly offensive. What don't you understand? It's called "free expression".

As all us taxpayers are maintaining the royals in a lifestyle and comfort we can only dream of, I think that we are entitled to know when they try to avoid paying something back.

Dec 9, 2014 18:02
acsonline

@Aj -- People are indeed in title to free expression. A waste of time when you have a Ukip crowd facing you, I daresay, time being a precious commodity. -- And a very Merry Christmas to you too!
"From jigging veins of rhyming mother wits,
And such conceits as clownage keeps in pay,
We'll lead you to the stately tent of war..."
(Marlowe)

Dec 10, 2014 11:56
NIGEL FARAWAY

Why all this Ukip bashing? We're the voice of the people, that's what we are.

Dec 11, 2014 09:21
acsonline

@Nigel Fartaway -- The people of ?... Can hardly be the people of Scotland, somehow...

Dec 16, 2014 16:01