Victor de Laveleye
Victor Auguste de Laveleye was a Belgian liberal politician and minister. He also served as announcer on Radio Belgique during World War II.
De Laveleye was a doctor in law, and was municipality Council member of Sint-Gillis, President of the Liberal Party and Liberal member of parliament for the district Brussels. De Laveleye was minister of justice and of public education. During World War II he was newsreader for Radio Belgique, a BBC station transmitted to occupied Belgium.
Biography
Victor de Laveleye was born in Brussels on 6 November 1894. He was a son of Auguste-Albert and Emma Lynen, who belonged to a well-known Antwerp liberal family. He also was a great nephew of the Liege professor Émile Louis Victor de Laveleye.He studied law at the Free University of Brussels and became a lawyer at the Brussels Court of Appeal.
In 1926 he became a municipal councilor in Saint-Gilles, Brussels. He also gave lectures at the ULB and was a reporter at the Liberal Congress in 1932. He became a member of parliament, chairman of the Liberal Party and for a few months Minister of Justice in Paul Van Zeeland's second government.
In 1940 he fled to London via France. At the end of July 1940 he received the proposal to take charge of the broadcasts of the BBC that were intended for German-occupied Belgium. On 28 September 1940, the first broadcast of Radio Belgique was aired.