Ministers with jurisdiction • Minister for Foreign Affairs, European Affairs and Foreign Trade:
Sophie Wilmès (since 1 October 2020) • Minister for Development Cooperation:
Meryame Kitir (since 1 October 2020)
Central Government The central government is structured as follows: • the Directorate General for Bilateral Affairs (DGB) • the Directorate General for Consular Affairs (DGC) • the Directorate General for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid (DGD) • the Directorate General for European Affairs and Coordination (DGE) • the Directorate General for Legal Affairs (DGJ) • the Directorate General for Multilateral Affairs and Globalisation (DGM) • the Staff Directorate for Personnel and Organisational • the Staff Directorate for Budget and Management Control • the Staff Directorate for ICT • the Protocol Directorate • the Strategy & Communication Directorate
Directorate General for Bilateral Affairs (DGB) The Directorate General for Bilateral Affairs (DGB) defends Belgian interests in and in respect of other countries. It promotes bilaterally – from country to country – the ethical principles and social values of Belgium: democracy, welfare, human rights and respect for the dignity of the individual. It also has particular regard for supporting Belgian economic interests.
Directorate General for Consular Affairs (DGC) The Directorate General for Consular Affairs (DGC) supports and supervises the work of Belgian consular departments abroad. These sections: • act as a town hall for Belgians living abroad with regard to matters of nationality, civil status, notarial deeds, legalisations, passports, identity cards and elections, among other things. • assist compatriots in transit or in difficulty abroad: tourists, Belgians arrested abroad, child abductions, etc. • issue a visa to foreigners who wish to reside or settle in Belgium. The Directorate General for Consular Affairs also informs and assists individuals in Belgium on consular matters and is in permanent contact with the Belgian authorities responsible for these areas (Justice, Home Affairs, municipalities, regions and communities).
Directorate General for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid (DGD) The Directorate General for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid (DGD) is responsible for Belgian Development Cooperation and comes under the authority of the Minister for Development Cooperation. The Belgian Development Cooperation strives for sustainable human development. It also aims to stimulate and strengthen the involvement of Belgian public opinion in North-South solidarity and development policy. DGD develops a common vision on development cooperation through a dialogue with all government institutions that have an impact on development policy, with the development actors involved in the Belgian Development Cooperation (NGOs, scientific institutions, etc.) and with the European and international institutions. DGD translates this vision into a number of priorities for the central government and the field. The
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) play a central role in this. DGD manages the development funds allocated of
Enabel, the Belgian development agency, as well as NGOs.
Directorate General for European Affairs and Coordination (DGE) The Directorate General for European Affairs and Coordination is responsible for preparing, defining, representing, managing and monitoring Belgian policy on Europe. With the increasing integration of Europe and the increased role of the EU internationally, DGE's mission is growing in importance. The DGE is at the heart of the Belgian decision-making process, in consultation with the federal institutions and the regional and community authorities, so that Belgium can speak with one voice on the European stage.
Directorate General for Legal Affairs (DGJ) The Directorate General for Legal Affairs (DGJ) has a general advisory role for all areas of law related to the activities of the FPS: public international law, European law, consular law, administrative law, employment contract law, etc. It is also responsible for the management of the FPS' activities. The DGJ also defends Belgium in international courts, the jurisdictions of the European Union and the European Economic Area, as well as the Belgian courts, in disputes to which the FPS Foreign Affairs is a party. Finally, the DGJ plays a key role in relation to treaties, which are by definition international, both during the negotiation and signature process and during the approval procedure by the various Parliaments.
Directorate General for Multilateral Affairs and Globalisation The Directorate General for Multilateral Affairs and Globalisation (DGM) is responsible for promoting and defending Belgium's foreign policy on multilateral issues and the
European Union's Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP). It is responsible for issues such as human rights, disarmament and non-proliferation, and environment and climate, among other things. The DGM is also responsible for maintaining the coherence of Belgium's multilateral policy through consultation with other federal bodies, the regions and communities and civil society organisations.
Network of posts The central government is supported by a worldwide, distributed diplomatic network of 118 posts. In 2020, Belgium has: • 84
embassies • 17
consultates-general • 3
consulates • 3
diplomatic offices • 1 Belgian office (in Taipei) 8 permanent representations to international organisations Moreover, Belgium has more than 300 honorary consulates, spread all over the world.
Staffing In June 2020, the FPS Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation employed 2,909 people. Of these, about 40% are staff at the central government and 60% are staff at the posts (expatriate agents on foreign career paths, expatriate contractors and locally recruited contractors). 50 FPS staff members are in the ‘special situation’ category, due to secondment to an international institution or leave on assignment. == Current foreign policy orientations ==