Dutch Iran Committee wants boycott of Iran Oil Show

The Iran Committee wants Dutch businesses to boycott the Iran Oil Show which is scheduled to be held from 16 to 19 April in Tehran. The Committee says their participation would undermine EU sanctions against the Iranian regime. The Iran Committee is a foundation created by Dutch citizens concerned about the government’s Iran policy. At the Oil Show, business in the energy sector will be given an opportunity to present themselves and gain... [more]

Dutch government to spend less on research

The Dutch government will spend 450 million less on scientific research in the coming years. The Rathenau institute, an independent institute which seeks to promote public debate on science and technology, on Wednesday submitted to parliament its overview of government spending on research in the period 2009-2015. The institute investigated how much money the ministries collectively spend on research. Total government research spending is... [more]

Dutch research identifies new leukaemia variants

Researchers at Rotterdam’s Erasmus Medical Centre have identified two new types of children’s leukaemia. They have published their results in the scientific journal, Cancer Cell. The new types are genetic variants of T-cell acute lymphatic leukaemia. The more that is known about the specific variants, the better the cancer can be treated. The researchers will now concentrate on developing new drugs which will target the leukaemia cells... [more]

Dutch IT companies should not cooperate with censorship

Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen has urged IT businesses not to supply internet content filters to all countries. According to the minister, IT businesses should first make sure that content filters will not be used to limit the freedom of speech. Mr Verhagen said IT companies should take into consideration that repressive regimes could abuse content filters. The minister will meet with the companies involved soon. He mentioned China... [more]

British, Dutch announce litigation after Icesave ‘no’ vote

Britain and The Netherlands have said they will return to the courts to get Iceland to refund them billions of euros after voters there said “no” in a referendum to the reimbursement plan. Iceland’s government insisted it could pay back more than 90 percent of the money lost, despite most voters having rejected a deal to refund 3.9 billion euros ($5.6 billion) to the two countries, according to partial results. “The... [more]

“No” vote ahead in Iceland debt deal referendum

Voters in Iceland rejected a second plan to repay debts to Britain and the Netherlands from a bank crash, partial referendum results showed Sunday, and the prime minister said economic and political chaos could follow. “The worst option was chosen. The vote has split the nation in two,” Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir told state television, saying it was fairly clear the “no” side had won. With around 85,000... [more]

Dutch consider banning religious animal slaughter

One of Europe’s first countries to allow Jews to practice their religion openly may soon pass a law banning centuries-old Jewish and Muslim traditions on the ritual slaughter of animals. In the Netherlands, an unlikely alliance of an animal rights party and the xenophobic Freedom Party is spearheading support for the ban on kosher and halal slaughter methods that critics say inflict unacceptable suffering on animals. The far right’s... [more]

ECB hikes interest rates for first time since 2008

The European Central Bank raised its main interest rate on Thursday for the first time since July 2008 just as Portugal became the latest victim of the eurozone’s deficit and debt crisis. The increase in the ECB’s benchmark refinancing or “refi” rate to 1.25 percent also marked the first change in either direction since it was cut to a record low of 1.0 percent in May 2009. With higher inflation and core eurozone... [more]

Dutch Prime minister warns about over-optimism, cabinet short of cash

Despite promising economic growth figures of 1.5% this year, the Netherlands still has a long way to go to close the gap caused by the economic crisis, prime minister Mark Rutte has warned. Speaking at a symposium in The Hague, the prime minister said the figures from the government’s macro-economic forecasting agency CPB sounded good but still have to be realised. In addition, the government wants the economy to grow more strongly... [more]

Illegal aliens receive ‘departure bonus’

Illegal aliens in the Netherlands are sometimes offered money to leave the country. According to a report published in newspaper de Volkskrant, the money allows illegal aliens – many of them failed asylum seekers – to build a new existence in their country of origin. Offering money is often cheaper – as well as more effective – than providing several months’ worth of shelter or locking people up in detention centres.... [more]

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