Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Undated photo of children playing outside at an residential complex for asylum seekers in the Netherlands
Undated photo of children playing outside at an residential complex for asylum seekers in the Netherlands - Credit: COA / Inge van Mill - License: All Rights Reserved
Health
Nidos
child asylum seeker
unaccompanied child asylum seeker
foster care
Zembla
child abuse
Thursday, 13 March 2025 - 09:44

Share this article:

Unaccompanied child asylum seekers mistreated in guardian families

Unaccompanied child asylum seekers are often neglected, starved, and otherwise mistreated in the foster families where the guardianship agency Nidos placed them, child protection workers and current and former Nidos employees told Zembla. “There are families where scabies is rampant and where a Dutch child would never be placed,” one source told the investigative program.

Zembla spoke to dozens of sources working in and around the shelter of unaccompanied child asylum seekers, including child protection workers, Nidos employees, residential supervisors, and teachers. Nidos calls the foster families involved “cultural families” because they have the same origin or background as the children placed with them. At the start of this year, 3,300 children were staying with such a foster family.

“I have experienced that young people have to work in the house or the company of the foster parents. Hours on end. Without rest,” one source said. “Or they get little to eat.” Signals of abuse or neglect are often ignored because there is a shortage of foster families willing to take in unaccompanied child asylum seekers. “The decision is often made: stay, there is no alternative,” a source said.

Nidos’s conditions state that children cannot be placed in families with obvious problems - for example, if the house is dirty or unhygienic, the family is poorly integrated, or the foster parents don’t have enough time. However, according to Zembla’s sources, Nidos is not adhering to its own rules. “I dare say that at least half of the families do not meet the requirements,” one said. Other sources made similar statements.

The youth protection workers Zembla spoke to also criticized Nidos’s screening process for foster families. “Often, they only check whether there is enough space in the home,” one source said. Children are often placed in families about which there have already been internal warnings. According to the sources, Nidos justifies concerns by referring to the foster parents’ backgrounds. “For example, that they punish in a different way. Within the cultural context, that is the norm. And we are not allowed to be critical of that.”

Experts are shocked. “I find this very worrying,” Marielle Bruning, a professor of juvenile law, told the program. “If there are signs of an unsafe situation for whatever reason, we must ensure that we bring those children to safety.”

Emeritus professor of pedagogy Micha de Winter sees similarities with the children he raised in a committee report about violence and sexual abuse in youth care and foster care in 2019. “Poor selection of families, poor supervision, insufficient guidance,” De Winter told Zembla. “There is a blind spot here. I think these signals are every reason to conduct a thorough investigation now. If they discover abuses, independent research must be conducted into this again.

The Health and Youth Care Inspectorate is responsible for monitoring the quality of care provided by Nidos. Asked for a response, the Inspectorate told Zembla that it recently started an investigation into Nidos after receiving signals from several sources in recent weeks about the safety of children.

Nidos didn’t answer Zembla’s written questions but did acknowledge that the quality of its work has come under pressure, partly due to a significant increase in children under its guardianship. The agency has, therefore, temporarily lowered the requirements for the supervision of children. Nidos also acknowledged that foster families have also been under pressure and that it has happened that children ended up in unsuitable families. “But safety always comes first,” Nidos said.

More like this

Image
Cropped picture of a child standing next to a backpack
Youth care org. still refuses to be open about years of foster child abuse: researchers
Image
Teddy bear
Foster parents sentenced to 8 years in prison for Vlaardingen girl's severe abuse
Image
Teddy bear
Foster father says he restrained Vlaardingen girl for safety, denies abuse
Image
Teddy bear
Listen when children ask for help, pleas severely abused foster girl's mom
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Thousands of Dutch face up to three years’ delays for higher-capacity grid connections
  • Cop claims he was unaware woman he pushed down at asylum shelter was pregnant
  • Highest Dutch business court overturns Volkswagen diesel emissions scandal fine
  • BBB Senate faction opposes conversion therapy ban despite earlier support
  • KLM cancels Uganda flights amid Ebola-related travel restrictions

Top stories

  • Football coach jailed for secretly filming over 500 boys in changing rooms
  • U.S. Embassy: Dutch World Cup fans can face long passport lines, social media checks
  • Tata Steel drops new Sustainability Chief Pols over pro-apartheid past in South Africa
  • Waiting times of a year or longer at some Dutch hospitals as doctor shortage grows
  • Video: One killed, two hurt in stabbing at Heerhugowaard business

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content