Police fired tear gas and water cannon and arrested around 400 people Saturday in the Belgian capital Brussels during a copycat "yellow vest" demonstration rocking neighbouring France.
"A policeman was injured in the face. He was taken to hospital but his life is not in danger," Brussels police spokeswoman Ilse Van De Keere said, adding that the protesters had hurled projectiles and paving stones.
"There has been a certain amount of damage," she said, adding that the situation was now back to normal.
About a thousand people took part in the rally and the police had to resort to teargas and water cannon to break up the demo, she said.
The area housing European institutions including the offices of the European Commission and the European Parliament was sealed off as a precautionary measure.
According to Belga news agency, young protesters blocked a highway linking Brussels to the town of Rekkem in Flanders, near the French border.
They also put up a barricade by the Franco-Belgian border close to Adinkerque, Belga said.
The "yellow vest" movement in France started as a protest about planned fuel hikes but has since morphed into a mass protest against President Emmanuel Macron's policies and top-down style of governing.
It has spilled over to some other countries, including Belgium and especially in the country's French-speaking region.
On November 30, a "yellow vest" protest by some 300 people in Brussels degenerated into violence in which two police vehicles were torched.
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