Dutch government on the brink after Geert Wilders pulls out of coalition

The Dutch government faces collapse after Geert Wilders announced on Tuesday morning that his hard-right Party for Freedom (PVV) has pulled out of the country’s fractious conservative coalition.

On Monday night a coalition meeting failed to agree on tough asylum demands from Wilders, which would breach European Union law. Emergency talks on Tuesday to resolve the situation lasted minutes.

“No signature for our asylum plans,” Wilders said on social media. “PVV leaves the coalition.”

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Remarkable scenes of gratitude greet Canadian war veterans in the Netherlands

Apeldoorne Netherlands Liberation Day

As a former Spitfire pilot who flew 60 missions over Nazi-occupied Europe during the Second World War, George Brewster is not one to be rattled easily.

But he says experiencing the warmth and gratitude of the Dutch people who have come out to cheer him and other Canadian Second World War veterans this weekend has left him speechless.

Well done.

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Muslim stabs an 11 year old girl to death in the Dutch town of Nieuwegein

Police on Saturday said they had arrested a man suspected of fatally stabbing an 11-year-girl in the Dutch town of Nieuwegein.

The girl was attacked in the street at 3:00 pm local time (1400 GMT) and medics were unable to save her life, police said.

ANP news agency reported that police had confirmed that the suspect was originally from Syria.

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Netherlands: Names of 425,000 suspected Nazi collaborators published

SS Nederland Panzergrenadier Brigade

The names of around 425,000 people suspected of collaborating with the Nazis during the German occupation of the Netherlands have been published online for the first time.

The names represent individuals who were investigated through a special legal system established towards the end of World War 2. Of them, more than 150,000 faced some form of punishment.

The full records of these investigations were previously only accessible by visiting the Dutch National Archives in The Hague.

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Amsterdam Struggles to Quell Unrest Days After Attacks on Israeli Soccer Fans

Authorities in Amsterdam are grappling with unrest after violent assaults targeting Israeli soccer fans last week sparked outrage around the world and kicked off a charged debate over migration and integration in the Netherlands.

Amsterdam police said they had arrested five more people in connection with last week’s violence, which included targeted assaults on Israeli soccer fans by attackers who chased them through the streets on motorbikes. Four of those remained in custody as of late Monday, police said. Four others detained on Thursday and Friday also remained in custody, the Amsterdam prosecutor’s office said.

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Calls for ‘Jew Hunt’ Preceded Attacks in Amsterdam

Wave of violence targeting Israeli soccer fans followed calls to hunt them down on popular messaging apps

AMSTERDAM—Israeli financial adviser Ofek Ziv had just emerged from the metro, heading to the Dutch capital’s central Dam Square with a group of Maccabi Tel Aviv soccer fans, when he says he was struck in the back of the head with a rock. A firecracker exploded near him. Men in ski masks later appeared, wielding knives and bats.

The assailants, he said, “had fire in their eyes. They want to catch you.”

Ziv and scores of other Maccabi supporters had traveled to the Dutch capital for a match with local team Ajax on Thursday night. Little did they know that, earlier in the day, they had become a topic of discussion on popular messaging apps, where users were calling for a Jodenjacht, or “Jew hunt.”


Renewed clashes in Amsterdam.

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Dutch Government Officially Requests Opt-Out From EU Asylum Rules

The Netherlands today officially asked the European Commission for an exemption from the EU asylum rules. In a letter, asylum and migration minister Marjolein Faber told the Commission the new government “aims to drastically reduce the volume of migration to the Netherlands” and that this is necessary to “fulfill our constitutional duties—providing for public housing, health care, and education.”

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Netherlands Halts Financial Support to Rejected Asylum Seekers

From January 1, 2025 the Dutch government will end payments to failed asylum seekers, with all national government funding of the National Aliens Facility (LVV) to cease next year.

Asylum Minister Marjolein Faber announced:

From January 1, 2025, the state contribution to the accommodation of people who should have left the country long ago will be stopped.

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The Netherlands is full, says Geert Wilders, amid immigration boom

The country’s population has grown by a million in eight years, straining housing and public services

The population of the Netherlands officially passed the 18 million mark this week, but the Dutch are not celebrating as the small country struggles with housing and public service shortages amid growing resentment over immigration.

Immigration from other European Union countries, especially Poland as well as war-torn Ukraine and from Syria, is driving a faster rate of population growth, which has nearly doubled in pace in the last eight years.

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Dutch Ban on ‘From the River to the Sea’ Chant Raises Free Speech Questions

Parliamentarians in the Dutch lower house narrowly voted this week to criminalise the chant “from the river to the sea,” which calls for Israel to be wiped off the map. There are questions over how the motion, passed by just 74-73 votes, will be enacted. But more importantly, it strikes at the heart of the debate over the limits of free speech.

Members of Geert Wilders’ populist Party for Freedom said the ban was in response to “a disturbing increase in anti-Semitic incidents in the Netherlands.” The motion adds that “from the river to the sea” comes “right off the Hamas charter and is therefore a call for violence against all Jews worldwide.”

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Dutch spies hid engineer’s role in paralysing Iran nuclear project

Erik van Sabben released a Stuxnet computer worm that compromised Tehran’s weapons programme. Weeks later, he was dead

A Dutch engineer played the “crucial role” in a mission to sabotage Iran’s nuclear weapons programme with a sophisticated computer virus as part of a US and Israeli mission, without the knowledge of his country’s government.

Erik van Sabben released the “very advanced” computer worm known as Stuxnet into the Natanz underground nuclear plant’s computer systems at the end of 2008, bringing the Iranian nuclear programme to a grinding halt. He was killed in a road accident two weeks later.

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Dutch government collapses over immigration policy

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) -The Dutch government collapsed on Friday after failing to reach a deal on restricting immigration, which will trigger new elections in the fall.

The crisis was triggered by a push by Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s conservative VVD party to limit the flow of asylum seekers to the Netherlands, which two of his four-party government coalition refused to support.

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Dutch farmers’ party calls for refugee cap as it soars in the polls

The Dutch farmers’ party has called for a cap on asylum seekers in the Netherlands as polls predicted it would challenge the prime minister’s party to become the country’s strongest political force in a general election.

The Farmers-Citizen Movement (BBB) came from nowhere to become the largest party in all 12 Dutch provinces in regional elections in March after a campaign dominated by large-scale tractor protests against compulsory farm buy-outs to hit EU climate change targets.

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Farmer’s protest party win shock Dutch vote victory

A farmers’ party has stunned Dutch politics, and is set to be the biggest party in the upper house of parliament after provincial elections.

The Farmer-citizen movement (BBB) was only set up in 2019 in the wake of widespread farmers’ protests.

But with most votes counted they are due to win 15 seats of the Senate’s seats with almost 20% of the vote.

“This isn’t normal, but actually it is! It’s all normal citizens who voted,” said leader Caroline van der Plas.

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Dutch Court Prosecuting Mohammedan In First-Ever Case For Enslaving Yazidis In Syria

On February 14 and 15, 2023, a Rotterdam court, the District Court of The Hague, held the first pro forma hearings against twelve women that the Dutch government brought back from a prison camp in Syria in November 2022. The women were arrested after arrival on suspicion of terrorist crimes, as suspected members of Daesh, a terrorist organization that is accused of committing genocide and crimes against humanity in Iraq and Syria. As announced by the Dutch Public Prosecution Service, one of the women is also suspected of slavery as a crime against humanity. The woman is said to have used a Yazidi woman as a slave in Syria in 2015. It is the first time that someone in the Netherlands has been charged with a crime against the Yazidis and for crimes against humanity.

Every country seems willing and able to prosecute their ISIS sluts. Except Canada. Justin wants that Muslim vote.

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