EXPLAINER
What you need to know about the Dutch coronavirus
riots
Violence has erupted across the country after the
imposition of a curfew to stop the coronavirus.
BY ELINE
SCHAART
January 26,
2021 4:52 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/faq-need-to-know-netherlands-dutch-riots-covid-curfew/
The
Netherlands has been shaken by three nights of rioting, from major cities to
small towns, by people angry at the imposition of a nighttime curfew to stop
the spread of the coronavirus.
Police have
described it as the worst unrest in four decades.
Riot police
clashed with protesters in Amsterdam as well as Rotterdam and The Hague. In the
southern city of Den Bosch, rioters set off fireworks, broke windows, looted
shops and overturned cars.
But why is
this happening in the Netherlands? Here are five FAQs on the Dutch riots.
What
happened?
Starting
Saturday, the Netherlands introduced a curfew from 9 p.m. to 4:30 a.m., which
is supposed to last until February 10, in a bid to stop the spread of the
coronavirus. Anyone outside between those hours must carry an official form
with the reason, or risk a €95 fine.
The unrest
started on day one of the curfew: In Enschede, protesters threw stones at a
hospital while in Urk — a town of just over 20,000 — a coronavirus testing
center was set on fire.
Police have
arrested approximately 450 people over the past few days, mostly in Amsterdam.
The Dutch
police union (NPB) said it feared that the protests were just the start of
curfew-related unrest. “I hope it was a one-off, but I’m afraid it was a harbinger
for the coming days and weeks,” NPB spokesman Koen Simmers said on Sunday. “We
haven’t seen so much violence in 40 years.”
Who’s
rioting?
The riots
grew out of calls on social media platforms such as Telegram and Snapchat to
protest against the new lockdown measures.
Officials
said the rioters were overwhelmingly in their teens, and questioned the extent
to which they were motivated by opposition to the curfew. A survey by I&O
Research for broadcaster NOS found that a majority of Dutch people support the
strict measures, with 70 percent saying they believed the government was right
to bring in a curfew.
Jelle van
Buuren, of the University of Leiden, told the newspaper NRC that the protesters
are very diverse and consist of young people, football hooligans, radical-right
groups such as Pegida and “hippy-like” groups who are critical of vaccinations.
“You cannot
distill a single political program from their grievances, they are too
different for that. They mainly agree on what they’re against, not what they
support,” he said.
National
Security Council Chairman Hubert Bruls agreed, saying there is no one group
behind the riots. “The rioters were of various types, some of them hooligans.
We also saw copycat behaviour: people who saw the images from Amsterdam and
Eindhoven and initiated that” behavior elsewhere, he said.
Bruls added
that the authorities are closely monitoring social media in order to curb the
spread of violence.
What’s been
the political reaction?
Prime
Minister Mark Rutte on Monday condemned the riots, calling them acts of
“criminal violence,” and adding that “99 percent” of the Dutch population did
stick to the curfew.
Rutte,
who’s now caretaker prime minister after the government resigned earlier this
month, stressed that the violence and rioting will not have any effect on the
measures in place to curb the spread of the coronavirus. “The curfew remains
necessary. It is the virus that is robbing us of our freedom,” he said.
Although
the riots are not the work of one specific population group, far-right
politicians Geert Wilders and Thierry Baudet blamed immigrants for the
violence. “This has nothing to do with protest and everything to do with failed
mass immigration,” Baudet’s Forum for Democracy party wrote on Twitter Monday.
“The —
often immigrant — scum are destroying our country,” Wilders said.
Mayors in
several cities have issued emergency decrees giving the police broader powers
of arrest.
“These
people are shameless thieves, I cannot say otherwise,” Rotterdam Mayor Ahmed
Aboutaleb said. “I had to threaten them with the use of teargas — a
far-reaching measure. I find that sad, because I have never had to do that in
my entire career as mayor.”
Why the
Netherlands?
There have
been protests and riots in other European cities in response to coronavirus
measures, including Berlin and Rome.
The main
difference in the Netherlands is that the government initially opted for a more
lax approach, resisting measures such as masks and curfews and appealing
instead to the common sense of Dutch citizens.
Experts
suggest that this approach has come back to haunt the government almost a year
later, with some people struggling to accept that the Netherlands has been
forced to introduce strict measures that it initially dismissed.
Despite the
violence, support for the government’s approach remains high, with 75 percent
fully or largely behind the Cabinet’s strategy. In the I&O Research survey,
almost half of those polled believed the curfew should be extended and a third
said it should be even tougher.
Leo
Lucassen, director of the International Institute of Social History, in an
op-ed in NRC, blamed Wilders and Baudet for vowing to oppose the curfew from
the moment it was announced.
“Although
Thierry Baudet, as well as the Urk division of PVV [Wilders’ party], say they
find the destruction and looting terrible, their crocodile tears do not seem
very credible,” he said.
What
happens next?
Some
right-wing politicians, including Wilders, have called on the government to
send in the army. However, there is no indication that Rutte is considering a
military deployment.
Justice
Minister Ferdinand Grapperhaud said on Tuesday that the “hooligans” who rioted
and vandalized city centers will have to pay for the damage.
“I see boys
aged 20 and 21 who are at the start of their working life, but they’ll receive
a claim for damages because they found it necessary to loot a supermarket,”
Grapperhaus said.


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