Stabroek News

Dutch PM Rutte under increased security due to threats –media

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AMSTERDAM, (Reuters) - The Netherland­s has sharply boosted security around Prime Minister Mark Rutte after police received signals of a possible attack by criminals linked to the drug trade, a Dutch newspaper reported yesterday, citing sources familiar with the matter.

Although gun violence in the Netherland­s is rare, killings and violence linked to the drug trade have become common in recent years, as underworld figures compete for territory.

A government source, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed the report in De Telegraaf. Dutch national security authoritie­s declined to comment on the report.

Asked about the report, Rutte told reporters: "Safety and protection are issues never to be discussed in public."

Rutte, whose conservati­ve government has vowed to crack down on organised crime, has always sought to maintain a limited level of personal protection since taking office as prime minister almost 11 years ago.

He is often seen cycling to and from his home and government buildings in The Hague and is often approached by passers-by wishing to take selfies with him or to chat.

In a sign of the increased violence in the drugs trade, a well-known Dutch crime reporter, Peter R. de Vries, was shot in broad daylight in Amsterdam in July, months after taking on the role of counsellor to the star witness in a high-profile drug case. He died of his injuries days later.

The former lawyer of the star witness had been killed in a similar fashion in front of his Amsterdam home in 2019.

Other threats to politician­s are not uncommon in the Netherland­s. Anti-Islam opposition leader Geert Wilders has been forced to live in a safe house and to surround himself with body guards since 2004 due to continuous death threats.

In recent months, several people around the country have been fined or handed short jail sentences for threatenin­g

 ?? ?? Marke Rutte ministers and lawmakers, mainly over coronaviru­s policies.
Marke Rutte ministers and lawmakers, mainly over coronaviru­s policies.

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