Calgary Herald

Dutch crime reporter critical after shooting

Two arrested in Amsterdam, third released

- BART H. MEIJER and ANTHONY DEUTSCH

AMSTERDAM • The shooting of journalist Peter R. de Vries is “a nightmare come true” for his family, his son said on Wednesday as support flooded in for the top Dutch crime reporter who was critically injured in an attack.

De Vries, 64, was shot on an Amsterdam street on Tuesday evening. He was fighting for his life in hospital, Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema said.

His son, Royce de Vries, said on Twitter: “Our worst nightmare came true yesterday. We as a family are surroundin­g Peter with love and hope during these hard times.”

Much is uncertain, he said, giving thanks for the outpouring of public support.

Police on Wednesday said two men arrested on a highway shortly after the shooting, one of them a Polish national, would remain in custody, while a third person had been released.

Gun violence is rare in the Netherland­s, but killings linked to the drug trade have become a fixture as underworld figures compete for territory. In 2019, a lawyer in a high-profile drug case in which De Vries was acting as an adviser to the star witness was gunned down in front of his Amsterdam home.

Well-wishers laid flowers and lit candles at the scene of the attack, just outside a downtown Amsterdam television studio where De Vries had been giving an interview about a recent case.

De Vries began as a newspaper crime reporter and became known for his 1987 book “The Heineken Kidnapping” reconstruc­ting the abduction of beer magnate Freddy Heineken.

Kidnapper Willem Holleeder was convicted in 2014 for threatenin­g De Vries, who helped the police solve cases for which Holleeder was ultimately sentenced to a life in prison.

De Vries also won an internatio­nal Emmy Award for his work investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of U.S. teenager Natalee Holloway in Aruba in 2005.

For 17 years he had his own television program, in which he often worked with victims' families and tirelessly pursued unsolved cases.

The Netherland's King Willem-alexander condemned the shooting as an attack on democracy that had shocked him deeply.

“This is an attack on journalism, a cornerston­e of our rule of law,” King Willem-alexander told reporters at a state visit to Berlin. “And as such it is an attack on our constituti­onal order.”

The Dutch royal house does not generally comment on individual incidents, so the king's remarks were a sign of De Vries' standing.

The attack also drew outrage throughout Europe.

European Council President Charles Michel called it “a crime against journalism and an attack on our values of democracy.”

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