Kuwait Times

Dutch support Muslims as MP vows to shut mosques

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Hundreds of Dutch citizens met at an Amsterdam mosque yesterday to show solidarity with the country’s Muslim population, as an anti-Islam MP again vowed to shut mosques and ban the Holy Quran should he win upcoming elections. Some 200 people representi­ng a broad coalition against racism in The Netherland­s gathered at the central Al-Kabir Mosque, saying they were deeply worried about the rise of discrimina­tion against Muslims in the European country.

“It’s very important that we make our voice heard. We as a Muslim community pose no danger whatsoever to society,” said Najem Ouladali, one of the organizers of the meeting which also included members of Amsterdam’s gay and lesbian community. “In fact, we are victims too of Islamic extremism,” added another speaker, Abdou Menebhi, who chairs a Moroccan organizati­on in The Netherland­s.

Various estimates put The Netherland­s’ Muslim population between 840,000 to 960,000 people, or around 5.0 percent out of a population of some 17 million people. Most Muslims are from Turkish or Moroccan descent, according to the Dutch central statistics office.

Talk during the meeting, which was paused for afternoon prayers, constantly returned to Dutch firebrand far-right MP Geert Wilders, who is campaignin­g ahead of elections on an anti-Islam ticket. The 53-year-old Wilders has courted controvers­y with his hardline anti-Islam, anti-immigrant stance and his incendiary insults against Moroccans and Turks. He has vowed in his party’s onepage manifesto that if elected he would ban the sale of Qurans, close mosques and Islamic schools, shut Dutch borders and ban Muslim migrants.

Support however for Wilders and his extreme stance seems to have withered in recent days according to the latest polls. “We believe that what Wilders is doing is very dangerous to our society,” Ouladali told AFP after the mosque meeting, speaking in Dutch. Ineke van der Valk, a researcher at the University of Amsterdam told the meeting that incidents of hate crimes against Muslims were on the rise in The Netherland­s. Since 2015 incidents involving discrimina­tion have almost doubled and there were at least 54 incidents involving mosques - like threatenin­g letters displaying Nazi symbols she said. “There has been a worrisome rise in this kind of activity in our country,”Van der Valk said.

Meanwhile the firebrand Wilders again vowed to close mosques, should he become prime minister after the vote, seen as a key litmus test of the rise of populist and far-right parties ahead of other national elections to be held across Europe later this year. “Closing mosques may be more difficult but you can do it,” Wilders told journalist­s in an industrial suburb of Amsterdam earlier at a press meeting. “You have to change the constituti­on. It takes time, certainly in Holland... but I am a lawmaker and if anyone can change the constituti­on and propose this, it’s me,”Wilders said.

Just 10 days before elections Wilders and his Freedom Party (PVV) appears to have slipped into second place behind the Liberal party of incumbent Prime Minister Mark Rutte after months of leading the opinion polls. “I am confident we will all have excellent results,” Wilders told a gaggle of mainly foreign journalist­s, referring also to France’s far-right presidenti­al hopeful Marine Le Pen. “Even if that will not be the case, the genie will not go back into the bottle... certainly things will change in Europe,” he insisted.

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