The Leuven issue was raised on 5 November 1967 when about 30,000 Flemish activists marched in
Antwerp to demand that the Catholic University become monolingual. They were supported by some parliamentarians from the Flemish wing of the
Christian Social Party (CVP). Following the success of the Antwerp demonstration, Flemish students marched in
Leuven to advocate similar demands. They carried banners reading "Walloons out" (
Walen buiten) and "Flemish Leuven" (
Leuven Vlaams) which shocked many French-speaking conservatives. In response, many French-speaking students travelled to the tiny hamlet of
Houte-Si-Plou in French-speaking
Wallonia to create a
satirical "University of Houte-Si-Plou". Violent demonstrations continued in Leuven. The government of
Paul Vanden Boeynants and the Catholic Church opposed the split and attempted to find a compromise, but this became impossible once the attitudes of both sides hardened. Negotiations between the two factions in January and February 1968 collapsed when the
Bishop of Bruges, Emiel Jozef De Smedt, gave a public speech advocating a split. This appeared to mark a break in the Church's position. On 6 February, the Vanden Boeynants coalition government collapsed as a result of the crisis. The
general elections which followed in March 1968 brought the government of
Gaston Eyskens to power. He released a government declaration on 24 June, announcing that the French section would move out of Leuven. The French section demanded that the Flemish section fund its relocation, since it had not demanded it. A plan was agreed for its relocation to a
planned town in Wallonia, dubbed "New Leuven" (
Louvain-la-Neuve). The university's split was formalised soon afterwards, creating two new universities: the
Université catholique de Louvain (UCL) and the
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (KUL). ==Aftermath==