Dutch football captains lead boycott of TV show over racist remarks
The captains of the Dutch men’s, women’s and youth
national football teams are boycotting a leading sports TV programme over the
racist comments of a longstanding pundit, warning: “Enough is enough.”
The Liverpool centre-back Virgil van Dijk, and the
Atlético Madrid goalkeeper Sari van Veenendaal have led the way after years of
the behaviour of Johan Derksen on the Veronica Inside show being explained away
as straight-talking humour.
Advertisers have also threatened to join the
players’ protest in response to a recent interjection from Derksen, 71, who had
likened a man in the blackface makeup of the Zwarte Piet, or Black Pete
Christmas character, to that of a well-known Dutch activist and Black Lives
Matter protester.
In a joint statement, supported by other past and
present footballers, the national team captains wrote: “This is no longer on
the brink. This has nothing to do with humour any more. This is not the
language of football. This is over the line. Not for the first time. Not for the
second time. Time and time again. Enough is enough.”
Derksen, a former professional footballer, has
survived a number of previous controversies including comparing a
Surinamese-born politician, Sylvana Simons, to a monkey, for which he later
apologised, and claiming that the standard of amateur football has been
threatened by the increase of players of Moroccan heritage. “I will be
dismissed as a racist but I really don’t give a damn,” he said at the time.
The Veronica Inside show has a bar-room style in
which Derksen’s provocative interventions have been excused in the past as the
price to be paid for freedom of expression.
But in the context of the Black Lives Matter
movement, and the recent acknowledgement by the Dutch prime minister, Mark
Rutte, of “systemic racism” in the Netherlands, Derksen’s employers are under
unprecedented pressure to act.
The former Dutch international Edgar Davids said:
“It is not the first time that racist things have been said and normally it has
always been brushed aside. Now everyone has had enough.
“Nobody wants to be insulted, right? There was a
time when people said, ‘Well, don’t be so upset’… We often say now: athletes
have an exemplary role. But of course that also applies to the media. They are
responsible for what they feed the public in terms of information.”
The pundit denies being racist and has refused to
apologise over the latest row, insisting that “the Netherlands is in very bad
shape when internationals and advertisers determine the content of programmes”.
Maiko Valentijn, the chief executive of the media
agency MediaCom, which purchases airtime on behalf of advertisers in the
Netherlands, described the situation in an interview with the newspaper
Algemeen Dagblad as being at “breaking point”.
He said: “Our advertisers deserve an explanation on
how to prevent their advertising from ending up in an environment of ‘content’
that is diametrically opposed to what these brands stand for.”
A spokesperson for the programme’s makers, Talpa
Network, said: “The statements within Veronica Inside are for the account of
the people at the table. Veronica is for freedom of expression and against
deliberately hurting fellow people or people groups.”




