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Court prohibits ethnic profiling

This morning the Court of Appeal issued a landmark ruling in the case of two citizens, Amnesty International, Control Alt Delete, RADAR and NJCM against the state over ethnic profiling by the Royal Military Police (KMar). Lawyers from PILP and Houthoff assisted the coalition in these proceedings. The court ruled that the KMar’s current method […]

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Hearing in lawsuit over Long Covid settlement for healthcare workers

In early 2023, unions FNV and CNV filed a lawsuit against the state to force financial relief for healthcare workers with Long Covid. PILP is acting as attorney for union FNV in this case. On Friday, Feb. 17, 2023, at noon, the hearing will take place at the District Court of The Hague. The hearing […]

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Objection filed on curtailing right to demonstrate We Promise Hoorn

PILP is assisting We Promise Foundation in proceedings against the municipality of Hoorn over the curtailment of its right to demonstrate. We Promise is a foundation working against racism, discrimination and exclusion in the Netherlands. Among other things, We Promise demonstrates against the statue of J. P. Coen in Hoorn, which the foundation says represents […]

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Coalition against ethnic profiling in appeal against KMar

A coalition of civil society organizations and two non-white citizens have appealed the court’s ruling on ethnic profiling by the Royal Military Police (KMar) during MTV (Mobile Security Surveillance) checks. During these checks in the border area, the KMar selects people based on their appearance, skin color, (alleged) ethnicity or nationality, among other things. There […]

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Judge still allows children to be cut off from drinking water

The court in The Hague ruled today that it is not necessarily unlawful for families with children to be cut off from drinking water when parents cannot pay the water bill. Children’s rights organization Defence for Children and the Dutch Legal Committee for Human Rights (NJCM) took the Dutch state and public water companies Dunea […]

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Detail of a banner held by anti-arms trade activists during a demonstration outside the annual black-tie dinner of the Aerospace, Defence and Security Group at the Grosvenor House Hotel on Park Lane in London, England, on January 22, 2020. The ADS Group, a London-headquartered non-profit trade organisation, represents and supports more than 1,000 British businesses involved in the aerospace, defence, security and space sectors. The protest was called by the Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT) and Stop The Arms Fair pressure groups, citing in particular sales of UK-made weapons and ammunition to Saudi Arabia, which continues to strike Houthi rebels in Yemen in a five-year war that has killed over 100,000 people and left millions more suffering. (Photo by David Cliff/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Judge acknowledges serious human rights violations Egypt, but still allows arms exports

The District Court of The Hague today, Tuesday, Nov. 23 2021, ruled in proceedings on arms exports to Egypt. The court found that the serious human rights situation in Egypt is “a given,” but that fact does not lead to a ruling that arms exports may no longer take place. The plaintiffs, a coalition of […]

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PILP wins lawsuit over right to demonstrate

The Council of State has ruled in favor of Amnesty International and others in a case of principle against the municipality of Maastricht. At the heart of the case was the question of whether municipalities may require that organizers of demonstrations hire their own certified traffic controllers. The Council of State ruled that this is […]

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Court allows ethnic profiling

This morning, the District Court of The Hague handed down its judgment in the case that PILP, together with Houthoff, filed on behalf of a coalition of civil society organizations and two nonwhite citizens against the Royal Military Police about ethnic profiling during MTV (Mobile Surveillance Security) checks. The court ruled that ethnicity may be […]

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Amicus curiae by PILP on right to housing in lawsuits Two Woods neighborhood

PILP filed an amicus curiae, or opinion letter, with the Hague Court of Appeals. The letter addresses the application of the right to housing in lawsuits over evictions in Rotterdam’s Tweebos neighborhood. The letter explains what the right to housing means and how this human right permeates the Dutch legal system. It is important, according […]

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Lawsuit over Ethnic Profiling in the Media

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 […]

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