Late-Night
Killing of a Teenage Girl on a Bicycle Unnerves Amsterdam
A
17-year-old was stabbed to death as she rode home after a night out. Her
killing has shaken a city where cycling safely at any hour is taken for
granted.
By Claire
MosesPhotographs by Ilvy Njiokiktjien
Reporting
from Amsterdam
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/27/world/europe/amsterdam-murder-lisa.html?searchResultPosition=1
Aug. 27,
2025
A night
out in Amsterdam this week looked as you would expect it to: lines of young
people in fashionable outfits waiting to enter clubs, the sounds of clinking
glasses and thumping music inside.
But under
the surface, the mood in the city has shifted — especially among young women —
since a man stabbed to death a 17-year-old girl who was cycling home after such
a night out last week.
The crime
has shaken Amsterdam, where the ability to bike safely at any hour is often
taken for granted. On Tuesday, a week after the killing, landmarks and
nightclubs in the city were bathed in orange lights to raise awareness and to
remember the victim, whom Dutch authorities have identified only by her first
name, Lisa. (The United Nations uses orange in a campaign condemning violence
against women.)
“It felt
almost hopeless,” Sophie Lane, 17, a high school student, said of hearing the
news of the killing. “Things like this feel like a step back.”
Ms. Lane
said she generally felt safe in Amsterdam. That such a murder could happen
there, she said, was “terrifying.”
On
Tuesday, a week after the killing, landmarks and nightclubs in the city were
bathed in orange lights to raise awareness and to remember the victim, whom
Dutch authorities have identified only by her first name, Lisa.
Other
young women interviewed in the center of Amsterdam on Tuesday night said they
would now think twice about cycling home alone late at night.
“As
girls, we know that something can happen,” said Anna Hind, 18, who was at a bar
at the Leidseplein, a square that is one of the city’s main nightlife hubs.
On the
night that Lisa was attacked, Ms. Hind said she had been out until 5 a.m. in
the same area. “It woke me up about how careful I need to be,” she said. The
attack, she said, “could have happened to anyone.”
The
authorities have arrested a 22-year-old man over Lisa’s murder, but have not
released his identity. He was in the Netherlands as an asylum seeker,
prosecutors said, a fact that has reinvigorated calls from far-right
politicians, including the populist leader Geert Wilders, for tighter
immigration policies.
The
authorities said they believed that the same man had hit and sexually assaulted
a woman on a waterfront in Amsterdam five days earlier.
Lisa had
been out with friends in Amsterdam in the early hours of Aug. 20, the
authorities said. Around 3:30 a.m., her friends took a taxi home, according to
Dutch news reports, but Lisa decided to cycle home to the town of Abcoude —
about 10 miles away — because she did not want to leave her electric bicycle
overnight.
According
to police accounts, she was riding on a quiet stretch without much other
traffic when the man attacked, stabbing her multiple times in the neck. She
called emergency services, but the response came too late. Her body was found
on the side of a road at around 4:15 a.m.
“This is
every woman’s and every parent’s biggest fear,” Amsterdam’s mayor, Femke
Halsema, said at a news conference with police officials last week. “The safety
of women and girls is not self-evident, and that’s a disgrace to our society.”
Freek
Wallagh, the city’s nightlife czar, added: “She was 17; she did exactly what a
17-year-old is supposed to do: enjoy life. Everyone knows a Lisa who cycles
home from the Leidseplein.”
Lisa’s
murder has dominated conversations over the past week across the Netherlands,
where such violence is relatively rare. The country’s murder rate was 0.7 per
100,000 people in 2023, lower than in nearby Belgium, France and Germany,
according to U.N. data. A GoFundMe campaign to pay for advertising that calls
attention to the issue of violence against women has raised more than 500,000
euros ($579,000).
“She
really did everything right,” Nienke ’s Gravemade, a writer and actor, said of
Lisa in a phone interview. She lamented that many conversations about the
girl’s killing still asked why Lisa had gone home alone, in effect casting part
of the blame on her.
Ms. ’s
Gravemade acknowledged that had been one of her first thoughts, too — much to
her own anger.
“Where do
we get off as a society to continue to make women and girls accomplices to
their own disasters, their own trauma, their own death?” she wrote in a widely
shared column in the newspaper Het Parool. “I’m claiming the night. I’m
claiming the streets.”
Claire
Moses is a Times reporter in London, focused on coverage of breaking and
trending news.


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