Dutch
vigilantes set up illegal border checks near Ter Apel
June 8, 2025
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2025/06/dutch-vigilantes-set-up-illegal-border-checks-near-ter-apel/
A group of
some 12 Dutch men and women set up their own border checks on the N366 between
Ter Apel and Rütenbrock in Germany on Saturday evening, wearing high-visibility
clothing and flagging down cars as if they were officials, the AD reported on
Sunday.
The
campaigners said their action was a protest against the ease with which
refugees can cross the border into the Netherlands. “Nothing is being done, so
we will do it ourselves,” one man told the paper.
The group,
waving torches, stopped cars and in some cases looked into their boots, the AD
said.
The
Noord-Nederland police force told news website Nu.nl later that they had
checked the group and spoken to them about their actions. But they were not
observed to be doing anything criminal, the police told Nu.nl. They declined to
comment further.
A source
told RTV Noord that Dutch police observed the group for a short time but did
not take any action.
Westerwolde
mayor Jaap Velema told the AD he “understood the frustrations” about the
failure to solve the refugee problem in Ter Apel, the main reception centre for
new arrivals in the Netherlands. “But this is not the way to express your
frustrations,” he said.
According to
the AD, the men and at least one woman were not local, and the initiative
appeared to come from a man in Emmen who had made an appeal on Facebook.
At one
point, the paper said, the group stopped a minibus full of German police
officers, who ordered them to leave German soil. They then moved to the car
park of a nearby Chinese restaurant and continued their campaign.
The
campaigners are planning to repeat the exercise at a different location, the
paper said.
Official
checks
Last week,
government auditors said extra checks at the Dutch borders are not helping to
reduce the number of asylum applications.
The
government introduced the additional checks to tackle irregular migration and
cross-border crime such as people smuggling and document fraud last year. The
checks were also intended to ease pressure on the asylum system, which is
struggling with limited reception capacity and housing shortages.
The new
controls led to more people being stopped than during earlier operations, and
more people were refused entry. However, there were fewer arrests for people
smuggling and document fraud.
The number
of asylum seekers arriving at the border also declined, but the audit office
said that this number has never been high. Of the 44,000 asylum applications
made in 2024, only 400 — less than 1% — were made at the border.

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