Dutch government under growing pressure to take in child refugees
They have gathered in city squares, parks and on
piers with the water lapping at their feet. In silent, physically distanced
protests, demonstrators stand 1.5 metres apart, some holding signs saying
“WeesWelkom” (be welcome) and “500 Kinderen” (500 children).
Since April, protests have taken place across the
Netherlands to lobby the Dutch government to take in 500 unaccompanied children
living in squalid camps on the Greek islands.
Last October, the Greek government asked EU member
states to shelter 2,500 lone children – about half the total on the Greek
mainland and islands. Following months of inaction, 11 EU member states, plus
Norway and Switzerland, have promised a home for at least 1,600 young asylum
seekers, who are mostly from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria. The Dutch
government is not among them.
Now the fragile four-party liberal-centre-right
coalition led by Mark Rutte is coming under growing public pressure.
One third of Dutch municipalities – 119 local
authorities representing 9 million people – have said they are in favour of
bringing 500 children to the Netherlands, according to the University of
Utrecht. Big cities, such as Amsterdam, Arnhem and Utrecht, have offered to
take in some children.
About 100 prominent figures signed an open letter
calling on the Dutch government to answer Greece’s “cry for help”. The campaign
has drawn figures from all walks of life, ranging from the two-time Dutch EU
commissioner Neelie Kroes to the indie music star Joshua Nolet.
For several Mondays running, Nolet, who visited
Greek island camps in 2016 and 2017, has filmed himself staging a one-man
protest and encouraged his 32,000 followers to do the same.
“There are 20,000 people living in a camp that has
space for 3,000 asylum seekers,” he said, referring to the infamous Moria camp
on Lesbos, where people queue for hours for food, water and to wash. “This is
insane that we are letting this happen and it does not reflect the country that
I grew up in.”
For Rutte, the situation would be easier to dismiss
if it didn’t chime with views of coalition partners. Two of four governing
parties, the liberal D66 and the Christian Union, support the campaign, while a
third, the Christian Democrat Alliance, is under pressure from its grassroots.
Klaas Valkering, a CDA councillor in Bergen, North
Holland, said 80 local CDA chapters supported his campaign to bring children to
the Netherlands. “There are 500 children in a Greek refugee camp, all of them
without any parents and that is why we need to help them.”
Some local chapters are motivated by pure
compassion, he said, while others also want to take a stand against the
perceived rightward drift of the CDA. The debate has also played into what it
means to be an EU member during a time of crisis.
“European solidarity is not only Dutch intensive
care patients using German intensive care-units,” Valkering told Trouw last
month.
The government argues there is a better wayand last
month pledged €3.5m-€4m to help children in Greece.
Some of the money will help set up a guardianship
scheme to represent the legal interests of unaccompanied children in Greece.
The government has also promised to fund places in reception centres on the
Greek mainland – although Greek officials have raised questions over when
shelters would be up and running.
A Dutch justice ministry spokesperson said a
memorandum of understanding signed with the Greek government on 18 June
included agreement on sheltering 48 children on the Greek mainland “as soon as
possible, with a total capacity of 500 over three years”.
“It is a more humane solution,” said Bente Becker,
an MP and spokesperson on migration for Rutte’s VVD party. She said this
“structural solution” would dissuade families from putting their lives in the
hands of people smugglers, citing the model of the EU’s 2016 deal with Turkey.
“It should not be a ticket to the Netherlands when
you go to a Greek island,” she said. “What I don’t want to happen is that
parents decide their children should be sent in a rubber boat in the
Mediterranean sea, perhaps endangering their own lives.”
Critics say the government is mistaken if it thinks
it can fix Greece’s asylum system, riddled by accusations of misspent funds and
inadequate processes.
“The Greeks are “not able to solve” the issue, said
Sander Schaap at the Dutch Refugee Council. He described the plan to shelter
children in Greece as “naive”. The government plan, Schaap contended, is
“mostly an attempt to find a political solution to a political problem in the
governing coalition”.
Dutch politicians have been taking more restrictive
positions on migration since the 1990s, said Saskia Bonjour, a political
scientist at the University of Amsterdam. That tendency was reinforced by the
country’s “strong radical right presence”, from Pim Fortuyn to Geert Wilders
and Thierry Baudet. “There is a strong tendency in Dutch politics in general
and on the mainstream right in particular to interpret the potential electoral
success of the radical right as [meaning] general concerns aren’t being heard.”




