Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
TikTok
TikTok - Credit: dimarik / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
TikTok
Telegram
far-right
right-wing extremism
The Hague
Malieveld
riot
Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences
Nationale Cultuurverdedigers
Marcel H.
Tom B.
social media
2025 parliamentary election
Wednesday, 1 October 2025 - 10:28

Share this article:

TikTok gives far-right more reach to boost profit; Neonazis recruiting teens on Telegram

TikTok is actively promoting far-right livestreams to viewers who aren't actively looking for them, according to an international study led by media scientists at the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences. The social media platform profits from donations to the content creators. Neo-Nazis are actively approaching children as young as 12 on Telegram to recruit them, BNR reported based on its own research. Both platforms said that they don’t allow hate speech. In the run-up to the parliamentary election on October 29, TikTok has an election team active to detect and remove extremist content.

The researchers who investigated TikTok monitored the livestreams of over 300 German far-right TikTok users on one evening in July, NRC reports. These involved TikTok content creators who were identified as sympathizers of the far-right AfD party, or who were labeled as far-right because they shared racist or neo-Nazi content.

The researchers observed peaks in viewership during these livestreams, during which TikTok apparently pushed the streams to new viewers through the ‘For You’ and ‘Live’ sections, researcher Pieter van Boheem, who collaborates with the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences and is director of Post-X society, explained to the newspaper.

The same thing happened during the far-right riots in The Hague on September 20. NRC followed several TikTok users with several thousand followers who were live-streaming from the Malieveld. They sometimes received over 50,000 likes. According to the researchers, this indicates that their live streams were brought to the attention of hundreds of thousands of other users.

TikTok seems to be pushing the far-right livestreams because they get many donations from viewers, and TikTok keeps roughly half of the donations. Globally, donations for livestreams generate $10 million in revenue daily, according to TikTok itself.

According to BNR’s ongoing investigation into Telegram, neo-Nazis are approaching kids and teenagers in private chats on the messaging platform to recruit them. The youngest person approached was a 12-year-old girl, according to the broadcaster.

BNR investigated the Telegram group "Nationale Cultuurverdedigers" (National Culture Defenders), members of which were sentenced to prison for sedition and membership in a terrorist organization earlier this year. The convicted members were between 17 and 26 years old. The broadcaster found that veterans of the Dutch far-right are personally approaching the young members of this group to invite them to “comradeship evenings” or to share information about National Socialist ideology.

Marcel H., a 59-year-old former politician of the CP’86 party and formerly active in the Voorpost organization that was involved in the Malieveld riots, is one of the veterans actively approaching young people. He was the one to invite a 12-year-old girl to participate in far-right activities, according to the broadcaster.

Tom B., a Noord-Brabant resident who was involved with various far-right groups since the 1990s, was also active in Nationale Cultuurverdedigers. He offered to educate young people in classic National Socialist ideology, according to the broadcaster.

Tom B. did not respond to BNR’s request for a comment. Marcel H. denied that he was behind the account that BNR linked to his phone number. He also said that he did not target children. “I don’t even know a 12-year-old girl who’s active in the movement,” H. told the broadcaster. “And if you’re active on Telegram and invite someone, you really don’t know how old they are.”

Both TikTok and Telegram told the Dutch media outlets that they don’t allow hate speech on their platforms.

Asked whether TikTok was fine with creating more audience for right-wing extremism, a spokesperson told NRC that TikTok does not allow hate speech and terminated 19 million livestreams in the first four months of this year. “A 50 percent increase compared to the previous quarter. We are committed to continuously improving security on our platform,” the spokesperson said.

"Calls for violence and terrorist propaganda are always removed from our platform," regardless of how and where they are found, a Telegram spokesperson told BNR. Telegram works with the Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology to combat this content and has removed over “116,000 groups and communities linked to terrorism in the first half of 2025,” the spokesperson said. According to the broadcaster, Nationale Cultuurverdedigers has been removed from Telegram, but the channels for White Lives Matter and Defend Netherlands are still active.

More like this

Image
PVV leader Geert Wilders listens as Prime Minister Dick Schoof speaks to the Tweede Kamer ahead of the debate on the fall of his first Cabinet. 4 June 2025
GL-PvdA wants gov't to say politicians fuel extremism; Wilders won't moderate tone
Image
Rioters set a police car on fire during an anti-immigration protest on and around the Malieveld in The Hague, 20 September 2025
Hague riots prove threat of normalizing right-wing extremism: counter-terror office
Image
Riot police at an anti-lockdown protest at the Malieveld in The Hague, 14 March 2021
Netherlands working on new weapons for riot police after far-right riots in The Hague
Image
FvD leader Thierry Baudet classhing with D66 MP Jan Paternotte during a parliamentary debate, 27 March 2024
At least three municipalities boycotting FvD over candidates from far-right groups
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • ICC chief prosecutor Karim Khan suspended over sexual misconduct allegations
  • Nearly half of Dutch municipalities to extend opening hours for World Cup matches
  • Most of Europe's cocaine is processed in Netherlands
  • KNMI issues nationwide code yellow for thunderstorms, hail, strong winds
  • Biodiversity recovery in Dutch fresh water turning back into decline

Top stories

  • Netherlands residents wasting less food; Still trashing 25 kg per person per year
  • Dutch gov't to ban kidfluencers: No under 16s making commercial content on social media
  • Food prices could jump 10% next year, Dutch supermarkets warn
  • Only 6 fines in two years since ban on catcalling, sexually harassing women on street
  • Big Tobacco enters Dutch regulated cannabis experiment with stake in largest grower

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

Footer menu

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