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The Netherlands: xenophobic campaign follows Theo van Gogh
murder
By Jörg Victor
23 November 2004
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Social tensions have mounted in the Netherlands following the
murder of the film director and journalist Theo van Gogh. Politicians,
the media and some sections of the intelligentsia are responsible
for encouraging xenophobia.
Van Gogh was brutally murdered in Amsterdam on November 2 by
a Dutch male of Moroccan descent, who is alleged to be an Islamic
fundamentalist. In the name of the fight against terrorism,
the entire Muslim minority of Holland is now being subjected to
a witch-hunt. Out of approximately 16 million inhabitants of the
Netherlands, there are about 900,000 Muslims, of whom one third
originate from Morocco. Many are now third-generation immigrants.
The hysterical reaction to the murder of van Gogh has revealed
a deeply divided society. Politicians and journalists have called
for an end to tolerance and have made the Muslim minority
the scapegoats for increasingly explosive social tensions.
On November 5, three days after the assassination, Deputy Prime
Minister Gerrit Zalm, a member of the right-wing Peoples
Party for Liberty and Democracy (VVD), declared war
on Islamic fundamentalism in the name of the coalition government.
It would be eradicated root and branch, with money
being no object, Zalm said. His utterances did not garner any
public criticism; rather, the coalition government of the CDA
(Christian Democratic Appeal), the VVD and Democrats 66 was accused
of not having been hard enough up to now.
Former VVD parliamentary deputy Geert Wilders demanded the
passage of laws to remove any bureaucratic obstacles and allow
the authorities to arrest and deport all Muslims that were under
observation. Wildersa well-known Islamophobeonly recently
resigned from the VVD, saying it was not consistent in its opposition
to Turkey joining the European Union. Last year, Wilders demanded
the introduction of a five-year moratorium for immigrants from
Turkey and Morocco.
Even before the assassination, Wilders had announced he wanted
to create a new right-wing, anti-Islamic party. He targets the
reactionary dregs of society, who feel encouraged by the governments
attitude and whose xenophobia has now found expression in arson
attacks on mosques and Islamic schools.
The right-wing populist Pim Fortuyn List (LPF) has also resorted
to the most appalling methods in order to stoke up anti-Islamic
hysteria. Two weeks ago, a government legal spokesman revealed
that the threatening letter from an Islamic terrorist group
addressed to LPF chairman Sergei Moleveld was a forgery. Moleveld
had previously made great play in the media of this threatening
letter. He finally admitted to the public prosecutors
office in Rotterdam that he had written the letter, and then posted
it to LPF parliamentary deputy Mat Harsh and himself.
At the funeral service for van Gogh, the Minister for Alien
Affairs, Rita Verdonk (VVD), had referred to such threatening
letters, and demanded an end to tolerance, adding,
We must raise our fists together against these kinds of
terrorist acts.
Encouraging a pogrom atmosphere
The generalised accusations with which the Dutch government
reacted to the murder of van Gogh have encouraged violent right-wing
extremists. Since Deputy Prime Minister Zalms declared
war on Islamic fundamentalism, a wave of arson and bomb
attacks has rolled over the country, aimed indiscriminately at
Muslim institutions, encouraging a pogrom atmosphere.
So far, there have been approximately 20 such attacks on mosques
and Islamic schoolsincluding in Eindhoven, Huizen, Breda,
Heerrenveen and Rotterdamas well as an arson attack on the
Moroccan consulate. It is pure luck that there have been no casualties
so far.
In the small town of Uden, an Islamic primary school was burned
down during the night of November 9. The culprits had previously
daubed the building with slogans like R.I.P. Theo
and White Power.
The security authorities are exerting far less energy pursing
those guilty of these racist offences than in tracking down and
arresting supposed Islamic fundamentalists. In Uden, for example,
before the attack on the Muslim primary school, representatives
of the town authorities and the police had met and decided that
staff shortages meant they were unable to offer greater security
precautions to the Islamic minority.
Other sections of the population have reacted differently.
Newspapers have reported that everywhere in the country, committees
of Muslims and non-Muslims have formed to protect Islamic institutions.
Reports of counter-violence are also increasing, with several
churches suffering arson attacks. The Islamic Tawhid Brigades
has warned that the country would pay a high price
if the state does not prevent the attacks on Muslim institutions.
A spiral of violence threatens to develop, which in future could
extend beyond the buildings belonging to the various religious
communities.
The state has reacted by intensifying repressive measures,
and by acting harshly against alleged Islamic extremists.
Last week, the public prosecutors office conducted arrests
in The Hague. According to Attorney General Haan Moraal, the action
took place in the Laak district, inhabited overwhelmingly by immigrants,
as part of an ongoing terrorist investigation.
When the police special units encountered resistance, the district
became more like a war zone. The entire area was blockaded by
the police, and all those wanting to leave had to show identification
papers. Those who were unable to produce ID were taken away for
cross-examination. Special military commandos using tanks entered
the district, and helicopters carried out surveillance overhead;
the air space was closed down for a radius of 7 kilometres. The
deployment was coordinated by an emergency task force comprising
the highest level of the security services. Later ,the arrests
of two Dutch males, aged 19 and 22, were announced.
The fear of Islamic violence is being fuelled by
all levels of the state. Whereas the secret service had only spoken
previously of the Netherlands being a possible target for
terrorist attacks, the Dutch secret service AVID has now
published a report that calls Holland the most important
recruiting ground for new Al Qaeda fighters. According to
the report, among the second-generation Muslim immigrants in the
mosques, cafes or prisons, there are dozens of rootless
young people who can be recruited. The recruitment
of these young people shows that a violent radical Islamic current
is secretly spreading its roots in Dutch society. These
tendencies form terrorist cells throughout the country, which
are ready to strike at any moment, the report claims.
Social crisis
Media reports in the Netherlands play on the supposed inability
of many Muslims to integrate. The writer Leon de Winter claims
that these people are not mature enough to live in Dutch
society. However, hardly any mention is made of the role
of the right-wing extremists, the links between Christian fundamentalist
organisations and the government and the increasing social crisis.
A well-organised right-wing extremist scene has existed in
the Netherlands for several years, which now feels encouraged
by the policies of Jan Peter Balkenendes government and
is behaving ever more aggressively. Muslim representatives have
drawn attention to the fact that attacks on mosques and Muslim
schools or community centres have been taking place for years,
but were always hushed up.
Prime Minister Balkenende comes from a Christian fundamentalist
tradition and heads the arch-conservative Christian Democratic
Appeal (CDA). This party arose in the 1960s from the amalgamation
of three religious groupingsthe Catholic Peoples Party
(KVP), the Anti-Revolutionary Party (ARP) and the Christian-Historical
Union (CHU). According to the official document Welcome
to the Netherlands, The ideology of the party is based
on religious convictions.
In recent years, the Dutch population has faced an enormous
social decline. While wages have stagnated and lost their purchasing
power, business taxes have been cut. To plug the resulting budget
gap, social security benefits have been slashed drastically. Without
receiving what remains of social security benefits, more than
a fifth of all Dutch people would fall below the poverty line.
The recent austerity measures announced by the government make
clear that these benefits will not exist for much longer.
This has already produced an enormous social polarisation.
Poverty is increasingly concentrated in the suburbs, where the
unemployment rate and the numbers of those without a high school
diploma lie far above the national average.
Immigrants have been particularly affected. While the official
unemployment rate is 4.5 percent, among all immigrants it is 14
percent, with the figure for Turks and Moroccans topping 16 percent.
The real number of unemployed is substantially higher, since the
government statisticians employ computer models that exclude various
jobless groups from the figures.
While the well-off residential districts in many larger Dutch
cities have become foreigner-free zones, in other areas ghettos
are forming plagued by hopelessness and social misery. In these
areas, the governments constant cuts in social spending
have created a desperate situation in which drugs, prostitution
and criminality can flourish. The despair of many people in such
districts then provides fertile soil for religious fanaticism.
The government has reacted with increasing state repression,
reflected amongst other things in a rising prison population.
At the beginning of the 1980s, there were approximately 4,000
prisoners in the Netherlands. Today, this number has risen to
16,500. Apart from eastern Europe, only Britain, Spain and Portugal
have a higher percentage of prisoners. More than half of the prisoners
in Holland are immigrants. Thus, the proportion of jailed immigrants
is far higher than the proportion of immigrants in the total population.
At the beginning of October, 200,000 people demonstrated against
the governments attacks on social spending, the largest
protest action in the history of the Dutch trade unions. Many
foreigners also took part in this demonstration. Yet, neither
the unions nor the social democratic Labour Party (PvdA) has an
answer to the social crisis. They are collaborating with a government
that is trying to use the murder of Theo van Gogh to make scapegoats
of all Muslims in the Netherlands, and seeking to divert social
anger into racist channels.
See Also:
Theo van Gogh murdered on the streets
of Amsterdam
[10 November 2004]
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