DutchNews, April 14, 2017
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| Opponents of the conference demonstrate on Thursday. Photo: Bram Saeys v HH |
The decision by Veldhoven’s mayor to ban a
conference by the only political party permitted in Eritrea was upheld by a
court in Den Bosch on Friday afternoon.
The organisers of the conference went
to court to have the ban against their meeting at a conference centre in
Veldhoven lifted.
Mayor Jack Mikkers said on Thursday evening he would not
allow the meeting to go ahead, after police arrested over 100 demonstrators who
had gathered outside the conference centre where the gathering was due to be
held.
The 128 people arrested were all released from custody on Friday morning
and the public prosecution department has yet to decide if any of them should
face charges, broadcaster NOS said.
The People’s Front for Democracy and
Justice, the only political party permitted in Eritrea, had planned to hold its
annual youth European conference in the Netherlands this weekend.
Despite the
ban, local broadcaster Omroep Brabant said the meeting had started on Friday
afternoon. According to the conference Facebook page, some 500 people are in
attendance.
However, a spokeswoman for the conference centre told the
broadcaster that an alternative programme of music is taking place instead.
Provocation
Many Eritrean refugees in the Netherlands regard the conference as
an act of provocation, Tilburg University professor Mirjam van Reisen told NOS
earlier this week. ‘The government wants to show the Eritrean community that it
still rules in the Netherlands,’ she said.
Eritrea has been condemned by the UN
for crimes against humanity and the UN estimates hundreds of thousands of
Eritreans have fled the country in recent years.
Dutch government ministers
said earlier this week they were unhappy about the meeting being held on Dutch
soil but that there were no grounds to ban it in advance.

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