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A commuter wearing a protective face mask waits for a train at the Gare Bruxelles-Central train station.
CNN  — 

The Belgian government announced Saturday that it would be giving a free ten-journey rail pass to all residents, as part of a package of measures to boost domestic tourism and the economy.

Other announcements included a VAT cut, higher welfare payments and a tax-deductible €300 gift check which employers can give to their staff to use in restaurants or on trips to the theater or museums.

Belgium entered the third phase of its lockdown-easing measures on June 8, with almost all businesses operating again, including hotels, cafes and restaurants, albeit with social distancing measures in place.

Despite this relatively swift exit from lockdown, Belgium has one of Europe’s higher death rates per capita, with more than 9,600 deaths in a country with a population of 11.5 million.

And not all residents have been playing ball with the existing measures – Prince Joachim, a nephew of Belgium’s King Philippe, was forced to apologize earlier this month when he contracted coronavirus after breaking lockdown to attend a party in Spain.

Het Anker
Het Anker: One of the oldest breweries in Belgium, Het Anker has operated inside an old beguinage (a sort of convent) in the historic city of Mechelen since 1471.
Het Anker
Het Anker: The brewery is still run by the Van Breedam family who bought it in 1872. They produce beers like Gouden Carolus Classic dark ale and Lucifer, a strong and bitter blonde.
Het Anker
Het Anker: Tours of the Brewery include a tasting and end on the rooftop with an unparalleled view of Mechelen's famous St. Rumbold's Tower.
Feullien
St. Feullien: In the Wallonian town of Le Roeulx, this 144-year-old family-owned brewery produces abbey-style beers like a brown ale, a tripel and a farmhouse ale called Saison.
De Halve Maan
De Halve Maan: This brewery tour ends with a tasting of their Brugse Zot Blond, a golden ale with subtle flavors of fruit and spice. Or there's the XL tour with a tasting of three different specialty beers in the cellars of the brewery.
De Halve Maan
De Halve Maan: The brewery has its own brasserie and bar serving its full portfolio of beer.
Duvel Moortgat_Debby Wilmsen
De Koninck: This place has been brewing its famous amber-colored ale at Antwerp City Brewery since 1883. The tour explains the history of the brewery, its beers, and the importance of the bolleke -- De Koninck's famous goblet-shaped glass.
Cantillon
Cantillon: The family brewery of Cantillon in Anderlecht has been in operation since 1900 and is famous for its lambic beer made with wild yeast strains and native bacteria.
Courtesy St Bernadus
St. Bernadus: In the remote village of Watou on the border with France, St. Bernadus has been making dark and blonde abbey ales since 1946. A 2009 upgrade added a tasting room and a hopfield next to the brewery.
Debby Wilmsen/Duvel Moortgat
Duvel: This brewery's iconic beer was originally called "Victory Ale" when it was released soon after World War I. However, the name was changed after a local shoemaker said during a tasting, "This is a real devil" ("duvel" means devil in the local dialect).

Belgium will reopen its borders with other European countries on June 15. The ten-journey rail pass, which is ordinarily available for €83 for passengers aged over 26, is being distributed for free for all residents to use between July 1 and December 1. Belgians can also take their bikes on the train for free.

The Belgian capital of Brussels and the major cities of Bruges, Ghent and Antwerp are all accessible by train, as are the forested hills of the Ardennes region.

It sounds like a feel-good innovation for a country easing out of lockdown – but the national rail company says the government neglected to consult them.

Sophie Dutordoir, head of the public rail company SNCB, took to Twitter on Sunday to criticize the move, saying that the lack of consultation caused the state-owned SNCB serious concern.

“We think it’s a good thing that our government wants to promote the use of public transport as a sustainable way of traveling,” SNCB spokesperson Dimitri Temmerman told CNN.

“However, the way in which this decision was taken Saturday without any consultation raises very serious questions. A free distribution of train passes to all Belgian residents raises the question of the sanitary safety of our travelers and staff. SNCB will in no way jeopardize that safety, wherefore she worked hard these recent months.”

Temmerman reinforced Dutordoir’s Twitter statement, saying “That was why we asked for immediate consultation and all necessary assistance to avoid any risk of overcrowding on our trains and platforms. At the same time, the logistics and financial aspects need to be clarified.”

Even after discounting children and other ineligible travelers, the proposal could potentially burden the country’s railway network with close to 100 million extra journeys in 2020.

Safe social distancing on public transport is one of the biggest challenges facing cities worldwide as they consider lockdown-easing measures.

Many countries have made it mandatory to wear masks, and railway companies have been considering seat reservation models. London and China-based design company PriestmanGoode has proposed a seating solution to allow increased bike storage using the carriage space blocked off for social distancing.

Belgium’s federal justice minister Koen Geens was the first government representative to respond, reports The Brussels Times. “It is quite correct that the government ought to make contact with Sophie Dutordoir,” he said on Flemish news channel VTM Nieuws. “If that has not occurred, we have only ourselves to blame.”

Last month, the European Union unveiled an action plan to reopen its internal borders, safely boost its hospitality sector and to revive rail, road, air and sea connections.

The United Kingdom, meanwhile, which formally left the EU on January 31, has bucked the trend by controversially imposing a 14-day quarantine on all arrivals into the country, coming into force – like Belgium’s phase three measures – on June 8.