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Dutch gov’t falls over failure to agree on asylum policy

08-07-2023

HAGUE: Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said his coalition government was resigning over “insurmountable” differences about measures to curb the number of people seeking refuge in the country.

The resignation on Friday of Rutte, 56, the Netherlands’ longest-serving leader, and his coalition government means the country will face a general election later this year.

“It is no secret that the coalition partners have very different views on migration policy,” Rutte told reporters in The Hague “and today, unfortunately, we have to draw the conclusion that those differences are irreconcilable. That is why I will immediately … offer the resignation of the entire Cabinet to the king in writing,” he said.

Rutte had presided over late-night meetings Wednesday and Thursday that failed to result in an agreement on dealing with the number of people seeking asylum in the country.

During one final round of talks on Friday evening, the parties decided unanimously that they could not agree and, as a result, could not remain together in the coalition.

Local media said Rutte dubbed “Teflon Mark” after the non-stick pan coating for his political slipperiness had taken a tough stance on asylum seekers to deflect a challenge from the right wing of his party.

He reportedly demanded that the number of relatives of war refugees allowed into the Netherlands be capped at 200 per month, and threatened to topple the government if the measure did not pass.

The coalition which local media said was “not a happy marriage” last year faced a major scandal over overcrowded centres for asylum seekers in which a baby died and hundreds of people were forced to sleep in the open.

Rutte had promised a “structural solution” to the problem after what he called “shameful scenes” at the asylum centres. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

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