Hundreds of Charlton fans made the trip to Sint-Truiden in Belgium to protest against the owner of both clubs, Roland Duchatelet.

Addicks supporters made the 600-mile round journey to the Belgian town in a unified protest against the 70-year-old electronics mogul, whose reign has been plagued by poor results, dissenting fans and a rapid turnover of managers.

Revelations about Duchatelet's hands-on involvement in the management of the club surfaced last year when emails from the Belgian to former manager Chris Powell were uncovered.

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Charlton fans made the trip to Belgium to protest against owner Roland Duchatelet

Hundreds of Addicks fans joined with Sint Truiden supporters - another club Duchatelet owns

Duchatelet has turned into a villain at The Valley after poor results and high manager turnover

Dutchatelet suggested formations, players the manager should pick and demanded explanations as to why certain players were selected over others.

The supporters' Twitter page CARD, Coalition Against Roland Duchatelet, which is dedicated to getting Duchatelet out of the club, organised the protest in Belgium and fans rallied in support of the cause. The protest reached Strayen, Sint Truiden's stadium.

CARD explain: 'The Coalition Against Roland Duchatelet - an umbrella for Charlton supporters' groups campaigning to rid owner Duchatelet from our club.'

Charlton are on their 7th permanent manager since the Belgian took over at the Valley and have fallen from the Championship down to 16th in League One in that time.

Fans were carrying an assortment of cards which urged the Belgium to sell up and get out

Fans made an early start and got the bus to the Belgian town, just east of Brussels

The Addicks have seen a rapid decline in recent years during a turbulent period in the club's history, some of which has coincided with Duchatelet's takeover in 2014.

The club's supporters staged a similar protest last November, with fans telling the owner it was 'time to go' on the weekend of his 70th birthday.

Supporters were united against Duchatelet, who owns three other clubs; Carl Zeiss Jena, Alcorcon and Ujpest, as they watched Sint Truiden beat Eupen 2-1 in the Belgian First Division.

Current manager Karl Robinson is the 7th boss in three years under Duchatelet's ownership