Spotlight
Why Rotterdam erupted
The Covid riots were about more than hooliganism
BY SENAY
BOZTAS
Senay
Boztas is a journalist living in Amsterdam.
November
22, 2021
https://unherd.com/2021/11/why-rotterdam-erupted/
When
hundreds of rioters piled into Rotterdam centre on Friday night, attacking
police, throwing bricks, setting off fireworks and rampaging through the
streets, it was no small irony that they left a police car burning outside the
Erasmushuis. This cultural building represents one of Rotterdam’s most famous
exports: the humanist and Renaissance scholar, Erasmus, known today as a beacon
of tolerance and liberty.
But from
the images of the violence that were soon shared across the world, there didn’t
seem to be much of that famed Dutch moderation, openness and reasonableness on
show. While the rioters left destruction in their wake, it later emerged that
the police had directed live rounds of fire at rioters, leaving four people
with gunshot wounds. As Dutch virologist Marion Koopmans — who initially
likened the protests against the Netherlands’ latest coronavirus restrictions
to a World War Two bombardment (before retracting the war analogy after facing
a barrage of criticism) — said, there was a “bitter irony” to the location of
such wanton violence.
Dutch
leaders were quick to paint the riots as acts of hooliganism rather than
protest, with commentators citing the existence of group chats where people
reportedly said things such as: “Where’s the protest? I want to riot.”
Rotterdam mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb called it “an orgy of violence” that drew “a
number of people who had no intention of acting peacefully, but who were there
to riot, to confront the police, and to destroy public property”. Dutch
caretaker justice minister Ferd Grapperhaus echoed his comments, saying that a
protest against a controversial (and as yet unimplemented) idea to restrict
access to certain areas for unvaccinated people was hijacked by football
hooligans and criminal low-life.
But just 10
months after a the country was gripped by nationwide riots in protest at an
earlier coronavirus curfew, such an explanation seems overly simplistic. I
can’t be the only person here in the Netherlands left wondering why some of the
country’s 17.6 million citizens are so visibly out of control and alienated
from the majority. This isn’t some new phenomenon: the Dutch police have been
highlighting the increasing violence of protesters for several years.
According
to the latest reports, it seems that rioters in Rotterdam were made of a number
of disparate groups, motivated for a range of reasons. Football hooligans,
young men with nothing to do, harbour workers with low wages and job security,
and those suffering from the national shortage of decent housing were all ripe
for civil disobedience. As MP Attje Kuiken says: “It’s a poisonous cocktail.”
But behind
their resentment — which includes recent anger at a nationwide ban on fireworks
this New Year — there are clearly bigger social problems. A widespread
disaffection with government is evident in the peaceful protests in major
cities practically every weekend (sometimes for things as trivial as wearing
face masks).
As in many
other Western countries, there is a deep polarisation in Dutch society, and
increasing distrust in politicians. This was exacerbated when the Government
fell in January over a scandal in which tens of thousands of parents — most of
dual nationality — were wrongly accused of childcare benefit fraud and forced
to pay back every cent they had ever received, with devastating consequences
for their financial, personal and children’s wellbeing. Last week, the Dutch
highest court officially apologised for upholding unlawful tax office rulings.
But while 15,000 people have received €30,000 in compensation so far, the
apparent racism engrained in government institutions has not yet been fully
investigated.
After
elections in March, resulting in a hugely splintered outcome, Dutch political
parties are still unable to form a government — a telling picture about the
difficulty in finding common ground. Those who voted for change are no doubt
disappointed by the continued presence of the same establishment faces around
the table, led again by liberal Mark Rutte. Meanwhile, newish far-Right parties
such the Forum for Democracy have delighted in exploiting the pandemic to
undermine “the political elite”. As Amsterdam University cultural
anthropologist Dr Danny de Vries tells me: “Just a few days ago one of them
publicly threatened another politician in the chamber, saying his time would
come when tribunals are held to hold him accountable for ‘corona crimes’” Only
last week, the leader of FVD, Thierry Baudet, compared corona measures to Nazi
Germany.
Yet the
country’s political leaders have hardly earned a glowing report. For all their
confidence in their liberal, efficient and wealthy society, they have been
behind at every step in the pandemic. The Government was one of the slowest in
Europe to start vaccinations, and now that it has one of Europe’s highest
infection rates, it has just started offering boosters. Moreover, despite being
perfectly well aware that there have been at least 31,000 corona deaths (as
recorded on death certificates), the Government continues to put a much lower
figure of “officially-tested positive deaths” front and centre on its
dashboards. Conveniently, this number (18,966) is less than neighbouring countries
like Belgium, which have always recorded suspect deaths too.
And so
while there is broad support for vaccination and the Dutch have fully
vaccinated 84.7% of adults, trust in government policy and leadership has
plummeted recently. There have been U-turns on policy, with nightclubs open one
minute, and then closed the next, and an imprudent loosening of most
restrictions at the end of September. With coronavirus infections at record
highs in the past week, and hospitals saying they will soon have to make
decisions about who gets the IC beds, virologists are talking once more about
the need for a full lockdown — and it’s not only the coronavirus sceptics or
protesters who are looking at December with sinking hearts.
When he
appeared on a morning chat show yesterday, Nijmegen mayor and chairman of the
National Security Council Hubert Bruls was keen to emphasise that most people
are not out on the streets rioting. That’s true, and it’s difficult to say
whether the Dutch have more coronavirus sceptics — or, indeed, hooligans — than
anyone else (although the head of Viruswaarheid corona protest group Willem
Engel, adds a certain flair to events with his experience as a former dance
teacher).
But anyone
who has ever tried to stand in a queue in the Netherlands will realise that
there’s a widespread sense of assertive individualism here, which is not often
restrained by social norms such as politeness or
the-other-person-was-actually-first. Basic rights like freedom of speech,
movement and protest, are also grounded in the constitution, which has meant
that it is very difficult for a government to restrain them. This has led to a
surprising number of civilian court cases about coronavirus policy (eventually
overturned by the courts).
As a Brit
living in the Netherlands, I’ve been surprised how much opposition there has
been to following relatively minor rules such as wearing a face mask in certain
places; the mere prospect of showing a coronavirus pass for entry is enough to
cause a spiky hour of debate in most social groups, where it’s likely that at
least a few people will disagree with their existence as a matter of principle.
Another
element that might sit behind recent discontent is something that the
Netherlands is often praised for: a light-touch legal system and emphasis on
alternatives to prison and processes like mediation. Although Grapperhaus has
pledged to fast-track stiff justice for rioters, and police are busy scanning
camera images to round up the Rotterdam culprits, the Netherlands has recently
been seen by organised crime as a “low-threshold” entry point to Europe.
The current
struggle with organised crime has laid bare gaps in policing capacity, and a
sense that a liberal but illogical weed policy is not helping (because smoking
weed is tolerated, but growing it commercially is a punishable crime). Young
men are apparently attracted to act as “collectors” of drug shipments in
containers at Rotterdam harbour or criminal errand boys, and there’s a
desperate need to offer other opportunities to certain groups of young people —
something that has been recognised by the new mayor of Utrecht, Sharon Dijksma.
The recent
violence in Rotterdam cannot, therefore, be dismissed as mere hooliganism. As
the authorities launch an official investigation into the gunshot wounds
sustained on Friday night, and police forces are deployed across cities to
stop-and-search as bars close at 8pm, this isn’t a time to sit back and dismiss
the rioting as an “orgy” of criminal activity. It’s time to sift through
the ashes.
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