DutchNews, January 18, 2018
The Netherlands has
told Eritrea that its highest diplomatic representative in the Netherlands must
leave the country.
Tekeste Ghebremedhin Zemuy, the chargé d’affaires in The
Hague is being expelled because of the country’s pressure on Eritreans in the
Netherlands to pay a ‘diaspora tax’.
Foreign affairs minister Halbe Zijlstra
told parliament that the move is a ‘severe diplomatic signal’ to Eritrea.
Eritrea has a diplomatic mission in the Netherlands but no embassy.
Despite
talks with the ambassador in Brussels, no action has been taken to stamp out
the payments and the Netherlands has now decided to declare the chargé
d’affaires persona non grata.
Eritrea has imposed the 2% tax on its nationals
in other countries since 1994. However, research by the Dutch government last
September, which focused on the tax in seven European countries, found problems
with both the legal basis and the way the tax is collected.
In particular, tax
collection is seen as mandatory by many Eritreans, and non-compliance can lead
to the denial of consular services or the punishment of family members in
Eritrea, the report said.
The Dutch government said at the time the ways in
which the tax is collected are ‘unacceptable’.
Some 20,000 Eritrean nationals
live in the Netherlands.

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