Homeless
migrant workers should go home for healthcare: minister
November 23,
2024
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2024/11/homeless-migrant-workers-should-go-home-for-healthcare-minister/
Foreign
workers who come to the Netherlands to do low-skilled work and then lose their
jobs should return home to be treated for non-urgent health conditions, health
minister Fleur Agema has told current affairs show Zembla.
Agema, a
minister on behalf of the far-right PVV, said healthcare workers should assess
if jobless labour migrants have the right to treatment. “It is not up to me to
decide what urgent care is. That is for the professionals,” she said. “And they
should decide together ‘who do we have in front of us and is it not time that
they went home’?”
An estimated
5,000 people, mainly from eastern Europe, are currently without health
insurance in the Netherlands because they have lost their job. Their care is
paid for via the health ministry, which has a €75 million fund to help people
who are uninsured.
Doctors have
reacted with shock to the minister’s suggestion. “Our doctors have sworn to
help all patients,” said Inge de Wit from the Ikazia hospital in Rotterdam. “It
would be inhuman to take care away from them.”
The Dutch
hospitals association NVZ has also called on the minister to clarify what she
means.
Legislation
introduced in 2015 to stamp out fraud and non payment means that people in the
Netherlands without a valid address lose their right to health insurance.
Labour
migrants often lose their homes when they lose their jobs or their contract
ends, because despite calls for change, staffing agencies remain largely
responsible for providing their housing as well.
“So you are
saying if you become homeless, you have no right to healthcare?” said Rotterdam
Michelle van Tongerloo, who treats the homeless. “So if I see someone on the
street who may be ill, am I to check if they are a local resident or not? You
can’t do that, as a doctor.”
Legislation
Social
affairs minister Eddy van Hijum told MPs last month that legislation designed
to stop low-skilled workers from abroad from being exploited by staffing
agencies has been postponed again because there is no one to monitor
compliance.
The
legislation should have come into effect on January 1, 2026. It would have
required staffing agencies to get formal approval from the ministry before
being allowed to operate and pay a deposit of €100,000 as evidence of their
commitment to pay workers properly and meet tax and premium obligations.
It is the
second time the legislation, supposed to end the exploitation of thousands of
seasonal and other food industry and logistics workers, has been delayed.
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