The disappearance of a statue of the comic book artist in his Belgian birthplace was thought to be an act of decolonisation
It would have been a suitable assignment for Tintin, the intrepid Belgian boy reporter and his multi-talented, intuitive dog, Snowy.
Across Brussels, where Hergé, the creator of the eponymous comic books, was born, there are constant reminders of one of its most famous exports. A giant image of the character clinging to the back of a steam train from the book Tintin in America adorns one of the exits from the city’s Eurostar station, while a mural of Tintin, his seafaring friend Captain Haddock and Snowy covers the gable end of a house just over a mile away, surviving graffiti and vandalism.
More Stories
Labor loses $1bn from Victoria’s upcoming budget surplus in favour of ‘practical’ cost-of-living relief
Trump says he has a ‘little problem’ with Tim Cook over Apple’s India production
Son Heung-min tells South Korean police he is victim of blackmail attempt