The Netherlands is in the midst of a heated public and political discussion about âintegrationâ following streetfights in early November between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax of Amsterdam.
Novemberâs fighting, instigated by from Maccabi Tel Avivâs supporters, who were in Amsterdam for an away game, led to counter attacks by Dutch locals â which the Israeli government, and others, swiftly labelled as âan anti-Semitic pogromâ.
In the six weeks since, the Netherlandsâ , which includes populist Geert Wildersâ unabashedly , passed a series of motions with dangerous implications for protesters, migrants and Muslims, according to advocacy groups in the country.
These began, most notably, on November 19, when the Dutch parliament voted of Dutch security services âscrutinisingâ pro-Palestine activists and students, following a put forward by the conservative Reformed Political Party (SGP).
While âmotionsâ are not legally binding in Dutch politics, they are weather vanes that lay the groundwork for future legislation.
Announcing the results, the SGP party : âOrganisations that spread Hamas ideologies, and thus create a breeding ground for anti-Semitism, must be dealt with severely! It is good that our motion was adopted, calling on the government to examine these kinds of organisations and place them on the national terror list.â
The motion, first submitted by SGP on November 13, warned Dutch parliamentarians that the âHamas network is active in Europeâ and âconsists of a forest of umbrella organisations under varying names.â
It added that âindividuals within this network speak at universities and demonstrations [breed] anti-Semetism.â
It also called for the creation of a ânational steering committee to combat anti-Semitism in higher educationâ and to intensify efforts to ban anti-Semitic speakers and activities at universities.
âThis is a measure they can realistically implement,â says Lyra from Samidoun (Netherlands), the international Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network.
âSuch a steering committee would likely operate under [Hollandâs] National Coordinator for Combating Antisemitism, which is [highly influenced by Israeli lobbyists]. All of this could have potential implications for academic freedom of expression and political organisations relating to Palestine in higher education institutions.â
This âterror-taggingâ of Palestinian organisations hinges on the conflation of anti-zionism and anti-Semitism, adds Lyra.
Israeli influence in plain sight
SGPâs aforementioned motion that it came off the back of an Israeli report by Amichai Chikli, Israel's Minister of Diaspora and Combating Antisemitism, following early Novemberâs street fighting in Amsterdam.
On November 14, the leader of the conservative Farmer-Citizen Movement party, Caroline van der Plas, was seen in a parliamentary debate about SGPâs motion, the week before the November 19 vote.
On the same day, Israeli minister, Chikli, published an article with Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf discussing the Amsterdam violence via the : âIsrael sees the hunt for Jews as an Islamist terror attack: the Palestinian Community in the Netherlands (PGNL) incited the pogrom.â
Demanding tough measures, Chikli told the newspaper: âThis [PGNL] terrorist network must be eradicated [and that] the Dutch authorities must take legal and economic measures against the criminals and, as Geert Wilders suggested, deport those involved.â
to share the report, where he stated: âThe PGNL has a network of connections with the local Muslim community and occasionally arranges pro-Palestinian protests and rallies in various cities in the Netherlands⊠[On November 7], they were involved in the pogrom against Israeli tourists and Jewish people in Amsterdam.â
Following these interventions, the Dutch newspaper, de Volkskrant, that several ministerial sources working in and around Dutch national security said there is âunwanted Israeli interference in Dutch politicsâ and that these concerns exist at the âhighest official level.â
Chikli has a history of collaborating with right-wing parties across Europe. This summer, Israeli newspaper Haaretz that he had rallied behind Franceâs Marine Le Pen, gaining the ire of numerous Israeli diplomats.
It does not stop there
SGPâs motion is just one of several that have sent chills across migrant communities and civil rights groups in the Netherlands.
âAfter whipping up moral panic around the 'integration' of Muslims following the âMaccabi incidentsâ in early November, the far-right majority in parliament has used the climate of controversy to pass a spree of motions that propose draconic new surveillance and policing measures on pro-Palestinian organisations and muslim communities,â says Rahma Bavelaar, the chair of Report Islamophobia (Meld Islamofobie), a non-profit documenting and analysing racism and Islamophobia.
On November 25, the Dutch government also passed entitled: âKeeping data on cultural and religious norms and values ââof Dutch people with a migration background.â
Mpanzu Bamenga, a Dutch MP for the progressive Democrats 66 party, called it âa new social lowâ on a LinkedIn post, while others it has âracist starting pointsâ given that it seeks to collect data exclusively from migrants, Dutch Muslims and people not originally from the Netherlands on the assumption that they are antisemitic, homophobic or misogynistic.
The of motions goes on. , submitted in November, called for âa financing ban for organisations boycotting Israel, and to [label] any pro-Hamas statements as anti-Semiticâ.
The repression of Muslim and pro-Palestinian communities is nothing new among the Dutch far-right, but rather the work of more than two decades, explains Bavelaar.
âThey are using the disinformation and manufactured moral panic around the incidents in Amsterdam to attempt to quash protest against Hollandâs foreign policy, which has been uncompromisingly pro-Israel. A confluence of the Islamophobic and Zionist platforms of the far right.â
Advocates for Israel in the Netherlands have long pushed against the Dutch governmentâs adoption of the IHRA definition of antisemitism, which includes criticism of Israel.
âThese motions are an attempt to prepare political and legal ground for the imposition of a definition of antisemitism as terrorism, something that would expand the jurisdiction of anti-terror legislation to potentially include all organisations and individuals that mobilise against Israeli apartheid and genocide,â says Bavelaar.
All things considered, the situation in the Netherlands is a reflection of the âworrisome rise in fear-mongering and criminalisation of the Palestinian Liberation Movementâ, as well as Israelâs âincreasingly hysterical attempts at cracking down on its interests in the face of a growing popular movement in different parts of the world,â says Samidoun.
Sebastian Shehadi is a freelance journalist and a contributing writer at the New Statesman
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