Lawsuit over Ethnic Profiling in the Media

Bekijk alles
June 15, 2021
News items
Previous
Next

On June 15, 2021, the District Court of The Hague heard the case on ethnic profiling by the Royal Netherlands Military Constabulary (KMar). A coalition of citizens and civil society organizations took the state to court. The KMar’s current policy allows ethnicity to play a role in border controls. This leads to discrimination, which is why the coalition asked the court to put an end to this.

This case and the hearing have received a lot of media attention. Below is an overview of some of the reports:

Trouw: “Citizens want ethnic profiling at the border to stop: ‘unfair and humiliating'”.

AD: “Eindhoven councillor in case against marechaussee: ‘considered a potential criminal because of skin color'”

Hart van Nederland: “Ethnic profiling at border control is painful and must stop”.

NU.nl: “Proceedings to ban ethnicity as reason for control marechaussee”.

Volkskrant: “I don’t want to live in a society where we think ethnic profiling is normal”.

NOS: “Lawsuit against military police for ethnic profiling”.

RTL News: “Royal Marechaussee in court over ethnic profiling in checks.”

The verdict in this case is expected on Sept. 22, 2021. Read more about this case here, or learn more about strategic litigation against ethnic profiling here.

Tags: , ,
Previous
Next
Actueel

Gerelateerde berichten

analyse report research residence permit right to protest students
September 2, 2024 Right to protest

Analysis: Consequences of participating in protests for residence permits of students and staff

Everyone has the right to protest. International students and employees at educational institutions in the Netherlands also have this right, regardless of their residence status. PILP has received many questions about whether and how participation in a demonstration can affect the residence permits of international students and employees at educational institutions. In this analysis, PILP […]

bezwaar climate change demonstratierecht
July 30, 2024 Right to protest

Climate activists Twente object to restrictions on their right to demonstrate in Hengelo

Four climate activists affiliated with Extinction Rebellion Twente planned to demonstrate in Hengelo on May 25, 2024. The demonstration was supposed to have been a small demonstration on the climate crisis, calling on the public to participate in follow-up actions and activities around climate justice. The mayor of Hengelo imposed as many as 10 restrictions […]

Human Rights Board verdict
July 25, 2024 Discrimination by banks

Verdict: ING discriminates against customers based on their ethnicity in transaction checks

The National Institute on Human Rigths (NIHR) ruled on 25 July 2024 that ING discriminated in checks for terrorist financing. The bank wrongfully froze customers’ accounts and asked them extra questions about transactions solely because of their surname or the inclusion of a so-called “non-Dutch-sounding” name in the description. This particularly greatly affected people of […]

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.