Saturday, May 25, 2013
Dutch anxiety over ‘Sharia triangle’ police no-go area in The Hague
The
leader of the Dutch far-right Party for Freedom Geert Wilders speaks to
the press during his visit to the Schilderswijk district in The Hague.
Photograph: Martijn Beekman/AFP/Getty Images
There have been calls for an urgent debate in
the Dutch parliament about the integration of Muslim immigrants amid
claims that one area of The Hague, known locally as “the Sharia triangle”, is being run by a form of unofficial Sharia police.
The claims relate to the district of
Schilderswijk, about two kilometres from the city centre, where an
almost entirely Muslim population of some 5,000 people surrounds the El
Islam mosque, fuelling criticism that the government has failed to
ensure a proper ethnic mix in schools and local housing. One recent
investigation, in which local people were extensively interviewed,
concluded that Schilderswijk had become “orthodox Muslim territory”
which was now largely ignored by the city authorities, by politicians
and even by the police, on the grounds that it had become
self-regulating.
The investigation found that orthodox Muslims
had become so dominant that they were dictating what people in the
neighbourhood wore and how they behaved.
“The norms of the majority are beginning to take over,” it said.
In the case of women, dress was a particular
issue. One woman told how her daughter had been approached and told her
short skirt was inappropriate, while her son had been called a “kaffir” –
a racist term formerly used in colonial South Africa to refer to a
black person – for smoking.
A youth who had previously been involved in
local gangs said that criminality had dropped off, not because of the
police, but because he and his friends were “afraid of the wrath of
Allah”.
Another man said he felt he was gradually being
driven out of his home because he had a dog, and many traditional
Muslims tended not to keep or favour dogs.
A veiled Muslim woman, however, defended
Islamic practices, and said dressing modestly would “do the locals
good”. She pointed out that women in the Dutch ultra-conservative,
largely Protestant, Bible Belt also wore long dresses, and that shops
there were closed on Sunday – as many in Schilderswijk were on Fridays.
Local police chief Michel de Roos said: “We
have no indications there is a form of Sharia police here. That is not
to say it does not happen, but we are unaware of it.”
Last Tuesday, social affairs minister Lodewijk
Asscher and right-wing Freedom Party leader Geert Wilders paid separate
visits to the area, and are to report to parliament.
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