Emir Kir (born 17 October 1968) is a Belgian politician who has been mayor of Saint-Josse-ten-Noode since 2012, having been re-elected in 2018. He was a member of the French-speakingSocialist Party (PS) until he was expelled from the party in January 2020 after contacts with the Turkish far-right.
Between 1987 and 1989, he studied political science at the Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB).[2] He falsely claimed to be a "political science graduate" before a journalist revealed that he had lied since he had not submitted his final dissertation. He was only a candidate.[5]
In 2000, Kir presented himself as a candidate in the local elections in Saint-Josse-ten-Noode. Obtaining the second highest score in the municipality, he became alderman for Social Affairs and Public Education.[2][5]
In 2006, he took part in the local elections, winning more votes than the then-mayor Jean Demannez,[7][5] but did not (yet) claim the maïorate, as he was still Secretary of State in the Brussels government, becoming instead first alderman.[7] He also participated in the 2007 federal elections, was elected, but did not take office for the same reason. In 2009, he remained Secretary of State following the regional elections, but stepped down in the middle of the legislature. He also retained his seat as minister in the COCOF.[8]
In 2012, he ran in the local elections, again winning the greatest number of votes, higher than that of the head of the list Jean Demannez.[3][5] He was elected and became mayor of Saint-Josse-ten-Noode at the end of 2012, after stormy negotiations.[9][3][5] This made Kir the first mayor of Turkish origin in the French-speaking part of Belgium,[10] as well as the first mayor of foreign origin in the Brussels region.[11][3] His positions in the Brussels government were transferred to fellow party member Rachid Madrane.[12]
In November 2005, Kir failed in a lawsuit against journalists for calling him "a denier, a liar and a delinquent". The court found it proven that Kir had taken part in a demonstration which had as its aim Armenian genocide denial.[5][17] In 2015, Kir was absent from a one-minute silence in the Chamber of Representatives for the centenary of the Armenian genocide. He was called upon by Socialist Party (PS) leader Elio Di Rupo and told to follow the party line and vote in favour of recognition of the genocide.[18]
Kir was a member of the PS between 1995 and 2020. He was expelled from the party following a controversial meeting with a delegation of Turkish mayors which also included representatives from the far-right MHP party.[4][19][3][20]
In April 2019, when interviewed by Al Arabiya of Saudi Arabia, Kir compared Belgium to Nazi Germany for the Plan Canal, a large revitalization program which also included an initiative against Islamic extremism in Brussels.[21] The following month, he distributed campaign leaflets saying that the plan was an attack on Muslims, for which he was accused by other parties of sectarianism and clientelism.[22]