Travellers’ extinction policy – The Hague

Travellers’ extinction policy – The Hague

PILP supports travellers (through the foundation Sinti, Roma and Travelers) in The Hague in a lawsuit against the municipality, to ensure that The Hague stops violating the human rights of this community. In the lawsuit, the caravan dwellers are asking for more caravan sites.

The Hague has far too few caravan sites. Caravan dwellers have to wait years for a place and some of them will never get their turn. This is because The Hague has had an extinction policy for caravan sites for years. One of the most serious human rights violations of the extinction policy was the forced eviction of some 110 caravan sites, including the eviction of the Escamplaan caravan site between 2006 and 2010.

The Hague’s eviction policy has never been reversed or undone. Not even after the central government recognized in 2018 that the government must care for the culture of caravan dwellers and adjusted national policy accordingly. Not even after the Human Rights Board ruled on December 7, 2020 that the situation in The Hague discriminates against caravan dwellers and that The Hague has not taken sufficient steps to change policy since 2018. As a result, caravan dwellers are in a dire position.

The municipality has been reminded several times in recent years by the caravan dwellers of the obligation to undo the consequences of the previous discriminatory policy. The municipality has also twice been summoned by letter to amend the policy on caravans and to build additional sites. One of those letters was from the Sinti, Roma and Travelers Foundation.

However, The Hague has done (virtually) nothing in this regard. This is why the caravan dwellers are asking the court to rule that the municipality of The Hague is discriminating and acting unlawfully by not adjusting the eviction policy and by doing nothing to create more caravan sites. The caravan dwellers are also asking the court to order the municipality to realize enough new caravan sites. They are supported in the lawsuit by lawyers from PILP and from Houthoff.

The municipality first raised only defenses to admissibility. On September 6, 2023, the District Court of The Hague issued an interlocutory judgment on the admissibility of the Foundation in its claims. The Foundation was admitted to the proceedings and at the next hearing the case will be heard on the merits.

The municipality has since presented its substantive defense. The municipality has also published a Draft Nota Haags Woonwagenbeleid, which describes the basic principles of the new policy on caravan sites. The municipality’s substantive defense is related to that policy.

The substantive oral hearing will take place on April 3, 2024.

Related resources:

Read more about housing policy in the Netherlands and the case against the municipality of The Hague in this article by the Woonbond.

Watch the item from EenVandaag about caravan sites in The Hague:

In een oogopslag

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