Tech & Rights

Dutch Government Discriminates Against Travellers

The Ministry of Internal Affairs discriminates against travellers by including a 'zero' option in its "Working on caravan locations" guide for municipalities, the Netherlands Institute for Human Rights says.

by Nina Kesar

With its judgment of May 1, 2017, the Netherlands Institute for Human Rights has decided that the government discriminates against Roma, Sinti and travellers. The intervention of Public Interest Litigation Project (PILP) of the Netherlands Committee of Jurists for Human Rights played a significant role in bringing the case.

The case concerned a complaint from a group of travellers about the guidelines the government provided to municipalities in 2006. Because of the Dutch government's decentralization of housing policy, municipalities are in fact responsible for ensuring the right for travellers to reside in caravans.

To help with this, the government created a guide, "Working on caravan locations" intended to give municipalities assistance in developing their local caravan residency policies.

In the guidelines, five policy options are provided, under which is a "zero" option. This option is also known as an "extinction policy" because it is intended to make caravan residency disappear.

'Extinction policy' is discriminatory

The Netherlands Institute for Human Rights already decided in 2014 that the extinction policy is discriminatory. With its current judgment, the Institute clarifies that the government has made a prohibited distinction by including the "zero" option in its guide.

The institute concluded, in agreement with PILP's argument, that

"by opting to include the 'zero' option as a policy option, the defendant not only has advanced discriminatory caravan residency policy by municipalities, but also legitimized it."

The PILP is content with the judgment. The government cannot disregard caravan residency culture, and should do more to protect caravan residents and their culture.

We hope that the government will play a more positive role in the protection of this culture and will provide municipalities with guidelines to give caravan residency a place within their housing policies.

If the government does not do this, PILP will consider further legal action.

Donate to liberties

DONATE TO LIBERTIES

Your donation makes our team stronger, our campaigns louder, and our defense of your human & digital rights more impactful.

KEY ACHIEVEMENTS

  • 100+ EU-wide human & digital rights campaigns
  • 500+ rights defenders trained
  • 70,000+ monthly website visitors
  • Quotes in The Guardian, The New York Times, Reuters & more


See our annual reports for more

Subscribe to stay in

the loop

Why should I?

You will get the latest reports before everyone else!

You can follow what we are doing for your right!

You will know about our achivements!

Show me a sample!