Medal of Military Merit (Belgium)

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Meritorious service medal
Merite MIlitaire Belge.jpg
Medal for Military Merit (obverse)
Awarded by Flag of Belgium.svg Kingdom of Belgium
Type Medal
Eligibility Personnel of the Belgian Armed Forces
Awarded for Exemplary behaviour or act
Status Active
Statistics
Established 25 February 2005
Precedence
Next (higher) Commemorative Medal for Foreign Operations or Missions
Next (lower) Commemorative Medals for Army Marches
100px
Ribbon bar of the Medal of Military Merit

The Meritorious service medal for personnel of the Belgian Defence Forces and Foreign Armed Forces (Dutch: Medaille van Verdienste ten gunste van de personeelsleden van defensie en van vreemde legers, French: Médaille du Mérite en faveur des membres du personnel de la défense et d’armées étrangères) is a military decoration of Belgium. It was established on 23 February 2005[1] as a more rewarding successor of an earlier Medal of Military Merit (created in 1988) and is awarded to members of the Belgian Armed Forces and civilians working for the Belgian Defence who show an exemplary meritorious behaviour in the completion of their duties or who have accomplished an exemplary meritorious act.

The Medal may also be awarded to foreign military and civilian members of a foreign Armed Force who have provided exceptional support to the Belgian Defence.[1]

The Meritorious service medal is awarded by Royal Decree.

History

The original Medal for Military Merit was created in 1988 by Ministerial Decree and awarded internally within the Ministry of Defence. However, it was felt that this limited the visibility and importance of the award, and a new Medal for Military Merit with a slightly different official name was created in its place, that was to be awarded by the King of Belgium. The original Medal for Military Merit is to be considered as equivalent to the new one.[1]

Insignia

The medal is circular and struck from bronze, the obverse bears the Escutcheon-only version of the Coat of arms of Belgium, the plain reverse usually bears the engraved name of the recipient and date of the award. The medal is suspended to the ribbon by a ring though the suspension loop. The ribbon is light blue with four vertical white stripes. The original Medal for Military Merit had the same design and hung from the same ribbon as the new one, only the statute differs.[1]

Award prerequisites

The Medal for Military Merit is awarded by the King based on a proposal from the Director of Human Resources of the Belgian Armed Forces for award to persons who:

  • are more productive than most of their colleagues;
  • try to achieve perfection in their daily work;
  • have on their own initiative achieved something to the benefit of the Belgian Armed Forces;
  • have not had any previous penal or disciplinary sanctions;
  • behave in an exemplary manner; and
  • take into account human and social issues in their work.

The Medal may also be awarded to military and civilian members of foreign armed force who have provided exceptional support to the Belgian Armed Forces.[1]

One cannot be awarded the Medal for Military Merit if one has already been awarded the Civic Decoration for the same acts.[1]

Award ceremonies are usually held only once a year, the Medal is rare, with barely four to eleven yearly recipients. In the period 2009-2013, the Medal for Military Merit was awarded 55 times.

Recipients (partial list)

  • Lieutenant Yves Bertholet[2]
  • Sergeant Yoann Severijns[3]
  • Master Corporal J.-P. Doyen[3]
  • Warrant Officer G. Verlent[4]
  • Master Warrant Officer G. Lenders[4]
  • Chief Warrant Officer P. Istas[5]
  • First Sergeant-Major Jozef Van Lancker[5]
  • Corporal D. Tricot[6]
  • Major I. Dupont[6]
  • First Master Corporal Bruno Coenen[7]
  • Warrant Officer Pascal Blanchart[7]
  • Master Corporal Sean Vereecken[8]
  • Major Danny Snelders[8]
  • Chief Warrant Officer Stefaan Mouton[9]
  • Lieutenant Luc Gille[9]
  • Private First Class Timothy De Mars[10]
  • Master Warrant Officer Patrick Vermeulen[10]

Foreign recipients

  • Brigadier General Philippe Léonard[8] (France)
  • Colonel Mark E. Carter[10] (USA)
  • Major Anthony F. Sidoti[10] (USA)

See also

References

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Other sources

  • Quinot H., 1950, Recueil illustré des décorations belges et congolaises, 4e Edition. (Hasselt)
  • Cornet R., 1982, Recueil des dispositions légales et réglementaires régissant les ordres nationaux belges. 2e Ed. N.pl., (Brussels)
  • Borné A.C., 1985, Distinctions honorifiques de la Belgique, 1830-1985 (Brussels)
  • Belgian military regulation DGHR-REG-DISPSYS-001 of 20 February 2006
  • Belgian military regulation DGHR-SPS-DECOR-001 of 18 January 2006
  • Report of written questions and answers in the Belgian House of Representatives, 17 March 2014 (QRVA 53-152)

External links