Bangladeshi woman wins lawsuit over integration exam

Bekijk alles
May 20, 2019
News items
Previous
Next

An illiterate Bangladeshi woman whose family reunification application was rejected was vindicated by the Hague District Court on May 20, 2019, in her lawsuit against the government.

Self-study packages

The government developed special self-study packages, which enable citizenship candidates to prepare for the integration exam while abroad. According to the government, the woman neither passed the integration exam abroad nor attempted to do so.

The woman could not prepare because she did not have the necessary (digital) facilities. In addition, these self-study packages are not available in the Bengali language.

Judge’s verdict

The judge did not go along with the state secretary’s position that people in situations like this can also pass the integration exam and should do their best to do so. The judge ruled that it would be disproportionate to expect the woman to make sufficient efforts to pass the integration exam.

The Bangladeshi woman’s lawyer, Mr. Eva Bezem of Cleerdin & Hamer Lawyers, worked with the Civic Foundation and the Public Interest Litigation Project (PILP) in this case.

Read the ruling here.

Tags: , ,
Previous
Next
Actueel

Gerelateerde berichten

outdoor sleeping fines right to housing
April 16, 2025 The right to housing

Sitchting GOUD sends letter to municipality of Utrecht about outdoor sleeping fines for homeless people

Stichting GOUD sends letter to municipality of Utrecht about outdoor sleeping fines Stichting GOUD has formally requested a meeting with the Utrecht municipality today through a letter about stopping fining homeless people who are forced to sleep on the streets. The letter points out to the municipality that this practice, based on article 2:31 of […]

article blog Islamophobia movement lawyering

Nawal Mustafa on Movement Lawyering and the Struggle Against Discriminatory State Surveillance in the Netherlands

Movement Lawyering and the Struggle Against Discriminatory State Surveillance in the Netherlands In connection with the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, our colleague Nawal Mustafa has published an interesting and read-worthy blog article on Movement Lawyering on Human Rights Here. Movement Lawyering In her blog, Nawal explains that Movement Lawyering is rooted […]

Liberties network report Rule of law
March 17, 2025

Democracy in Decline: Liberties’ Rule of Law Report 2025 Exposes Serious Concerns

The 2025 Rule of Law Report by the Civil Liberties Union for Europe (‘Liberties‘) that was published today, reveals a concerning picture: democratic institutions in the EU continued to weaken in 2024 due to government neglect or active dismantling. The report, compiled by 43 human rights organisations—including PILP as a member of Liberties—provides a critical […]

Gerelateerde berichten

Our Dossiers

Our Dossiers

Support our work

PILP is the legal ally of civil society organizations, movements, communities, and activists dedicated to human rights. Your donation enables us to continue providing this service.