Belgian Official Gazette
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The Belgian official journal (Dutch: Belgisch Staatsblad, French: Moniteur belge, German: Belgisches Staatsblatt) is the official journal or gazette of the Kingdom of Belgium. It is where the official publication of laws, royal decrees, decrees, ordinances, and official notices are published. The publication is handled by the Federal Public Service Justice.
Content and history
[edit]Any new law or changes to it made by the government can only take effect once it has been published in the Staatsblad/Moniteur. Other legal formalities about which the Belgian people need to be informed, including activities such as starting a business, are also published in this paper. Also published are Court mournings after important deaths, and official banquets at Court, with transcripts of speeches.
The journal was established on 16 June 1831. During World War II, the journal continued to be published domestically but under the same title another document was published by the Belgian government in exile that didn't have effect in the German-occupied Belgium. However after occupation ended, both were considered valid historical continuations of the prewar journal. In order to distinguish between the two, the government-in-exile version is retrospectively entitled Belgian Official Journal (Exile Government).[1]
To save money, the paper version of the Staatsblad/Moniteur was replaced by an electronic equivalent in 2003, which is available to the public on the Internet. Three copies of every issue are still printed: one for the Royal Library, one for the Senate and one for the House of Representatives.
References
[edit]- ^ Knight, Thomas J. (March 1969). "Belgium Leaves the War, 1940". The Journal of Modern History. 41 (1): 53. doi:10.1086/240347. JSTOR 1876204. S2CID 144164673.