21/03/2022 - The Kurdish-Swiss movie by filmmaker Mano Khalil triumphed at the festival this weekend, while A Brixton Tale walked away with the Cineuropa Prize
21/03/2022 - The Kurdish-Swiss movie by filmmaker Mano Khalil triumphed at the festival this weekend, while A Brixton Tale walked away with the Cineuropa Prize
21/03/2022 - The Kurdish-Swiss movie by filmmaker Mano Khalil triumphed at the festival this weekend, while A Brixton Tale walked away with the Cineuropa Prize
Sunday, 02 May 2021 07:43 PM MYT
Sebastien Weverbergh, manager of the Café de la Brasserie prepares his bar for reopening and checks the equipment and beer faucet or tap handle. AFP pic
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BRUSSELS, May 2 Belgium’s cafe terraces will not re-open to thirsty beer drinkers for another week but the country’s renowned brewers are already all hands to the pump.
Six months after the country went into a second coronavirus lockdown, proud bar owners and beer makers alike are keen to get back to business.
They are confident their countrymen and women have not lost their taste for Belgium’s world-famous brews, but the task of getting new barrels into cellars is huge.
Belgium’s cafe terraces are not to reopen to thirsty beer drinkers for another week, but the country’s renowned brewers are already all hands to the pump.
Six months after the country went into a second COVID-19 lockdown, proud bar owners and beer makers alike are keen to get back to business.
They are confident their countrymen and women have not lost their taste for Belgium’s world-famous brews, but the task of getting new barrels into cellars is huge.
With interior service still banned and social distancing in place time was running out for some in an industry that has already been hit