Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Politics
Al Iqtisadiya
anti-Islam sticker
CBS
economic sanctions\
Fitna
Frans Timmermans
Geert Wilders
Minister Lodewijk Asscher
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Mark Rutte
PVV
Qur-an
religious slander
Riyadh
Saudi Arabia
Social Affairs
trade boycott
trade sanctions
United Nations Human Rights Council
visas limited
Monday, 19 May 2014 - 08:39

Share this article:

Saudi Arabia threatens NL trade sanctions over Wilders insults

Geert Wilders has incurred the wrath of Saudi Arabia. Last December the PVV-leader spread green anti-islam stickers that look like the Saudi Arabian flag. In place of the islamic creed, the text reads: 'Islam is a lie. Mohammed is a crook. The Qur'an is poison.' One of these stickers was sent to the Saudi embassy in The Hague with a letter. Now, Minister Frans Timmermans of Foreign Affairs says he will travel to Saudi Arabia in the very near future to try and dissuade the trade sanctions threatened against the Netherlands.

The Saudi business newspaper Al Iqtisadiya cites an anonymous source at the Saudi Council for the Chamber of Commerce. This source announced that the Saudi ambassador wrote the powers in Riyadh about Wilders' action, which is being stamped as hostile against Islam and Saudi Arabia. The source reported that the relevant Saudi Authorities were told that Dutch companies will be left out of future projects in the country. Visas to Dutch nationals will also be limited. This would be a hard blow to the Netherlands, as export to Saudi Arabia, and investments there are worth billions. According to the Volkskrant, based on CBS statistics, Saudi Arabia's main export to the Netherlands is mineral fuels, which was worth just under €34 billion in 2013. Exports to Saudi Arabia from the Netherlands include machines and transport material for just over €8 billion, chemical products for €4.8 billion, foodstuffs and living animals for €3.7 billion among other products. Timmermans now wants to go to Riyadh, the capital, "to try to iron this out." The minister's top officer will travel ahead next week. Where Timmermans hopes to use diplomacy to maintain the relations between the two countries, his party cohort, minister Lodewijk Asscher of Social Affairs, sees things differently. Asscher calls the possible economic sanctions a "crazy threat", the Volkskrant reports. "We have freedom of expression in the Netherlands. That is useless if another country thinks they have to impose sanctions." Asscher stated, on behalf of the Cabinet, that Wilders' new anti-Islam campaign sticker was "a sickening sticker with the sole aim to harm." Prime Minister Mark Rutte is taking the threats seriously. "We are figuring it out. We are on top of it", he said. Timmermans is unsure why Saudi Arabia is choosing to take this stance now, five months after Wilders' stickers came out. The ministry of Foreign Affairs emphasizes that there is no trade boycott. "We have been in discussions with Saudi Arabia about this for some time", Timmermans said Sunday. This is not the first time that Geert Wilders has directed his right to freedom of expression towards anti-Islam campaigning. In 2008, Saudi Arabia was one of several Muslim countries, such as Indonesia, to sign a protest petition against Wilders' anti-Qur'an film Fitna. Under their pressure, the United Nations Human Rights Council agreed to monitor the freedom of expression. Countries find that the Netherlands should ban religious slander. In a reaction, PVV-leader Geert Wilders calls Saudi Arabia "a dictator who can't even spell the words freedom and democracy. We should have boycotted that country a long time ago Who do they think they are to lecture a Dutch politician?"

More like this

Image
Dilan Yesilgoz reacting to Esther Ouwehands (PvdD) who was asking critical questions about the VVD during a parliamentary debate on the stalled Cabinet formation talks, 14 February 2024
Support for VVD and GroenLinks–PvdA leaders plummets ahead of elections
Image
D66 leader Rob Jetten speaking after the publication of the coalition agreement, December 2, 2025.
D66, VVD, CDA agree on key points to form new Dutch Cabinet; Jetten poised to be PM
Image
Wouter Koolmees in his first press conference as a discussion leader to find a path towards a new coalition government. 4 Nov. 2025
Coalition talks begin: JA21 pushes for PVV inclusion, VVD seeks center-right Cabinet
Image
PVV leader Geert Wilders voting in the parliamentary election on 29 October 2025
Wilders says he looks forward to returning to opposition as far-right PVV leader
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Disciplinary board suspends prominent lawyer over faulty legal advice, excessive billing
  • Court-ordered psychiatric care for criminals is under strain as waitlist rises to 261
  • Zundert community in shock after hot air balloon passenger leaps to his death
  • Dutch mortgage applications slip in May as home prices hit record high
  • Dutch gov't urged to critically examine whether AI can really solve healthcare problems

Top stories

  • Marketing firm behind iconic “I Amsterdam” campaign files for bankruptcy
  • Council of State: Public safety still at risk if fireworks ban rules are not tightened
  • Three hurt in two overnight stabbings in The Hague
  • Dutch gov't will try cutting EU development aid to Sierra Leone over Bolle Jos
  • Police threatened over video of cop throwing pregnant woman to floor in asylum shelter

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

Footer menu

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