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Tag: Convicted

  • Dutch lawmaker Wilders wants to deport those convicted of violence against Israeli soccer fans

    Dutch lawmaker Wilders wants to deport those convicted of violence against Israeli soccer fans

    THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Hard-right Dutch political leader Geert Wilders on Wednesday blamed “Moroccans” for attacks on Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam last week, saying during a parliamentary debate that they “want to destroy Jews” and recommending deporting those convicted.

    While lawmakers condemned antisemitism and agreed that perpetrators of the violence should be tracked down, prosecuted and handed harsh punishments, opposition legislators accused Wilders of “pouring oil on the fire” and said his statements were not conducive to “a better society.”

    Violence erupted in the Dutch capital before and after last week’s soccer match between Ajax Amsterdam and Maccabi Tel Aviv. Fans from both sides were involved in unrest; a number of Maccabi fans attacked a cab and chanted anti-Arab slogans while some men carried out “hit and run” attacks on people they thought were Jews, according to Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema.

    After the match, parts of a large group of Maccabi supporters armed with sticks ran around “destroying things,” a 12-page report on the violence issued by Amsterdam authorities said. There were also “rioters, moving in small groups, by foot, scooter or car, quickly attacking Maccabi fans before disappearing,” the report said.

    Amsterdam police said five people were treated in hospital for injuries in the violence. Police detained dozens of people before the match, but there were no immediate arrests for violence after the game.

    Reports of antisemitic speech, vandalism and violence have been on the rise in Europe since the start of the war in Gaza, and tensions were high in Amsterdam ahead of the soccer match. The assaults on Maccabi fans sparked outrage and were widely condemned as antisemitic.

    The violence badly tarnished Amsterdam’s long-held image as a haven of tolerance and sparked soul-searching across the country.

    Wilders, whose anti-immigration Party for Freedom won elections last year and now is part of a four-party ruling coalition government, said Wednesday that on the night Amsterdam commemorated Kristallnacht, the 1938 anti-Jewish pogrom in Nazi Germany, “we saw Muslims hunting Jews on the streets of Amsterdam,” and blamed ”Moroccans who want to destroy Jews.”

    He added that it was “a miracle that there were no deaths during this roundup, this jihad in the streets of the beautiful old Mokum that last week looked more like Islamic State territory,” he added. Mokum is a nickname for Amsterdam derived from a Yiddish word meaning “safe haven.”

    Wilders, who is sometimes described as the Dutch Donald Trump because of his fierce anti-immigration rhetoric, has lived under round-the-clock protection for 20 years because of death threats from Islamic extremists. He has also long been a staunch supporter of Israel.

    In parliament, he advocated canceling the Dutch passports of people convicted of involvement in the violence — if they have a double passport — and deporting them.

    Some lawmakers warned that his comments in the aftermath only served to deepen divisions in Dutch society.

    Rob Jetten, of the centrist D66 party, said Wilders’ rhetoric “does not contribute in any way to healing. In no way does he contribute to bringing our country together, but he throws oil on the fire and thus does not bring solutions against antisemitism and for a better society any closer, but only further away.”

    Frans Timmermans, who leads the biggest center-left bloc in parliament, agreed.

    “What you are doing is just stirring things up, dividing this country when this country needs politicians who bring people together, who bring solutions closer,” Timmermans said.

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  • Convicted drug mule enticed by lavish lifestyle

    It took Glenda, not her real name, five years to finally pluck up the courage to take her first trip to move drugs from Tanzania into SA and earn R40,000 for taking the risk. 

    Glenda, 46, a mother of three, from Gqeberha in the Eastern Cape, was introduced to drug trafficking in 2011 through a friend who was allegedly in the same circles with Nolubabalo Nobanda, who became infamous for being bust at a Bangkok airport with 650g of cocaine mixed with baking powder hidden in her dreadlocks in 2011. At the time Nobanda had been travelling from Brazil to Thailand.

    Glenda’s friend had just returned from a successful smuggling trip in Brazil when Nobanda was nabbed. 

    “My friend was living a lavish life in PE and I was unemployed. She detailed to me how she was making her money. She introduced me to her Nigeria handlers and I was enticed by the money, but I did not have the guts to go ahead and do it.”

    With young children to feed and living under her mother’s roof, Glenda finally gave in to the temptation in 2017.

    Her first trip was to transport cocaine to Brazil, but the mission failed as she could not keep the drug bullets in her stomach after ingesting them. She vomited during the dry run.

    “My handlers said I would not survive such a long trip and I was reassigned to go to pick up drugs in Tanzania,” she said.

    “I flew to Ethiopia and then spent four to five days in Lomé [Togo] and from there I went to Ethiopia. Throughout the journey I would get video instructions. Sometimes from people I did not know, on what I’d need to do. Uber drivers that I did not book would pick me up and drop me at the next point. I ended up in a hotel in Tanzania and the drugs were strapped around my body with tape. I didn’t even know what type of drugs they were.”

    She used a bus to travel through Zambia to Park Station in Johannesburg where two men in police uniforms were waiting for her. 

    “They came to me and checked my bus ticket and booked me an Uber to a hotel in Yeoville where my big boss was waiting for me. My feet were swollen and my boss gave me my money and booked me a foot massage in Sandton.”

    She said the drug mule industry was complex and often involved the police and airplane crew.

    “Sometimes you’d be told that the drugs you are collecting are inside the toilet in the plane and that a cabin crew member has left a screwdriver in your seat,” she said. 

    Her third trip to Brazil in 2017 would be her last as she was arrested in that country with 10kg of heroine hidden under her dress. 

    She was sentenced to six years and 10 months, but served a year and seven months at Penitenciária Feminina de Sant’Anna in São Paulo. 

    “I got out because of good behaviour and certain programmes that I did which included teaching other inmates how to make Xhosa beadwork. There were lots of SA women in that prison and four of them were from the Eastern Cape. I regret what I did. I was known as a drug lord in my neighbourhood when I returned from Brazil and that stigma is still there.”

    SowetanLIVE 



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