logo
A bill setting new limits on asylum-seekers passes in the Dutch parliament

A bill setting new limits on asylum-seekers passes in the Dutch parliament

Arab News04-07-2025
THE HAGUE, Netherlands: A pair of bills cracking down on asylum-seekers wishing to settle in the Netherlands has passed in the Dutch parliament after wrangling and soul-searching by some lawmakers who feared the law would criminalize offering compassionate help to undocumented migrants.
The legislation cuts temporary asylum residency from five to three years, indefinitely suspends the issuance of new asylum residency permits and reins in family reunions for people who have been granted asylum. It passed in the lower house late Thursday evening but could still be rejected in the upper house.
The Dutch Red Cross has estimated 23,000 to 58,000 people live in the Netherlands without an official right to residence.
Taking tough measures to rein in migration was a policy cornerstone for the four-party coalition led by the Party for Freedom of anti-Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders. The coalition collapsed last month after just 11 months in office, and migration is expected to be a key issue ahead of the snap election Oct. 29.
Wilders pulled the plug on the coalition saying it was taking too long to enact moves to rein in migration. His coalition partners rejected the criticism, saying they all backed the crackdown. His party currently holds a narrow lead in opinion polls over a center-left two-party bloc that recently agreed to a formal merger.
The opposition Christian Democrats withdrew their support for the legislation put to the vote Thursday over a late amendment that would criminalize people living in the Netherlands without a valid visa or asylum ruling — and would also criminalize people and organizations that help such undocumented migrants. The amendment was introduced by a member of Wilders' party and passed narrowly because a small number of opposition lawmakers were not present for the vote.
The vote took place in the final session of parliament before lawmakers broke for the summer. The upper house will consider the legislation after it returns from the recess. If Christian Democrats in the upper chamber reject it, the legislation will be returned to the lower house.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russia says open for Ukraine talks, will respond to Trump's ultimatum
Russia says open for Ukraine talks, will respond to Trump's ultimatum

Al Arabiya

time37 minutes ago

  • Al Arabiya

Russia says open for Ukraine talks, will respond to Trump's ultimatum

Russia said on Tuesday it needed time to respond to US President Donald Trump's ultimatum to end the Ukraine war or face new sanctions but it was ready for fresh talks with Kyiv. On Monday, Trump gave Russia 50 days to strike a peace deal with Ukraine, voicing fresh frustration with Moscow, and laid out an arrangement with NATO to supply Kyiv with new military aid sponsored by the alliance's member countries. 'President Trump's statement is very serious. We certainly need time to analyze what was said in Washington,' Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow's first reaction to the comments. Trump warned that if no deal was concluded, he would slap 'very severe tariffs' on Russia's trade partners in a bid to impede Moscow's ability to finance the war. Peace talks on ending the conflict, now in its fourth year, have stalled. But Peskov said Russia was still ready to negotiate and was 'waiting for proposals from the Ukrainian side on the timing of the third round of direct Russian-Ukrainian negotiations.' Two rounds of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine, held in Turkey in recent months, have failed to yield a breakthrough on ending the conflict. Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly rejected calls for a ceasefire. Russian troops have launched record numbers of drones and missiles at Ukraine, killing dozens of civilians in recent weeks. 'We maintain our readiness,' Peskov added, but indicated Trump's announcement could embolden Kyiv and hamper peace efforts. 'It seems that such a decision made in Washington and in NATO countries and directly in Brussels will be perceived by Kyiv not as a signal for peace but for the continuation of the war,' he said. The Ukrainian side has called it 'pointless' to hold further talks with the current Russian delegation, which it says lacks any mandate to make concessions and has turned up to two rounds of talks with a string of demands it finds unacceptable.

Ukrainians welcome US aid but see Trump's 50-day ultimatum to Putin as too long
Ukrainians welcome US aid but see Trump's 50-day ultimatum to Putin as too long

Al Arabiya

time2 hours ago

  • Al Arabiya

Ukrainians welcome US aid but see Trump's 50-day ultimatum to Putin as too long

Ukrainians welcomed President Donald Trump's pledge of more US-made weapons in their fight against Russia's invasion, even though it is unclear what exactly they will get and how quickly. The time frame for further arms deliveries that European countries have agreed to pay for is crucial. Russia is making a summer push to break through along the 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line, and its drones and missiles are hammering Ukrainian cities more than at any time in the past three years. Ukrainian officials have made no direct comment about Trump's decision to allow Russia 50 days to reach a deal to end the war or face what he said would be very severe economic sanctions. While some believe strict tariffs on Moscow could be a game changer, the postponement until September struck others as being too long. For Russia, Trump's delay of new sanctions is a reprieve. Senior Russian lawmaker Konstantin Kosachev commented: 'Oh how much can change both on the battlefield and with the mood of those leading the US and NATO in 50 days.' Russian state television pointed out that Trump's decision would bring a bigger financial burden for Europe. Russia currently holds about 20 percent of Ukraine. Ukraine's depleted army has recently been losing more territory, but there is no sign of a looming collapse on the front line, analysts say. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he spoke to Trump after the Republican leader's Oval Office announcement Monday, expressing gratitude for the decision to send more Patriot air defense missiles that are vital to defend Ukrainian cities. 'We discussed … the necessary measures and decisions to provide greater protection for people from Russian attacks and strengthen our positions,' Zelenskyy said on Telegram. 'We agreed to talk more often and coordinate our steps in the future.' Trump and Zelenskyy have had a notoriously fraught relationship, and Washington's consent to providing more weaponry has eased Kyiv's worries. Even so, some Ukrainians felt the US decision won't alter the course of the war. 'If we take the situation as a whole, it hardly looks like this will fundamentally change anything,' Kyiv resident Oles Oliinyk, 33, told The Associated Press. Nina Tokar, 70, was also skeptical. 'I have very little faith in (Trump). He says one thing today, and tomorrow he may say something else.' A Ukrainian army officer fighting in Ukraine's northeastern Kharkiv region said the 50-day delay on sanctions is a very long time. 'They (the Russians) will say 'Give us two more weeks,' and then in two weeks 'Give us another week.' It will drag on until October or November,' he told AP, using only the call sign 'Cat' in keeping with the rules of the Ukrainian military. Dutch Foreign Minister Caspar Veldkamp agreed. 'I do believe that the 50 days that Mr. Trump has announced is rather long. It's up to September 2. I think that's rather long.' Much remains to be worked out about how the weapons, especially the Patriot systems, will be provided, Denmark's Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen said in Brussels on Tuesday. But in an indication that Europe is relieved that the US hasn't walked away from the conflict, he added: 'The most important thing is that we now have an American readiness to deliver these most needed weapons.' Some European countries, such as Hungary and Slovakia, still rely heavily on Russia for energy supplies and could be hit hard by Trump's threatened secondary sanctions on countries that buy its oil and gas – an effort to isolate Moscow in the global economy. Lithuania's Foreign Minister Kęstutis Budrys said Trump's 50-day delay was a signal for Europe to 'prepare ourselves because we still have some member states that are exposed to imports of oil and oil products from Russia.' German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said it remains to be seen whether Trump's announcement will be a turnaround, but what is decisive is that the tone has changed. 'The president's threat to impose sanctions after 50 days is significant progress,' Pistorius told ARD television.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store