Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
A woman with her head covered stands on an Amsterdam bridge with a mosque in the background
A woman with her head covered stands on an Amsterdam bridge with a mosque in the background. March 13, 2017 - Credit: Ale_Mi / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
religion
Islam
Mosque
Salafism
Gulf states
Kuwait
Saudi Arabia
foreign funding
ministry of foreign affairs
Mark Rutte
national coordinator for counterterrorism and security
Gert-Jan Segers
ChristenUnie
Sadet Karabulut
SP
Tuesday, 24 April 2018 - 15:00

Share this article:

Dozens of Dutch mosques financed from Gulf States: report

At least 30 Islamic organizations in the Netherlands have applied for and received funding from conservative Gulf States in recent years. This involves millions of euros coming to the Netherlands from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, NRC and Nieuwsuur report based on confidential government information they managed to get hold of.

The information concerns three lists of names of Dutch mosque organizations who requested and received funding from Gulf Countries. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia have confidentially kept the Dutch government informed about this since 2010, according to Nieuwsuur. One of the lists also includes amounts involved in payments to Dutch mosques.

Combined with information already known about this type of funding, Nieuwsuur concludes that around 10 percent of Dutch mosques have asked for and received funding from Gulf countries.

In 2015 the government asked its scientific research and documentation center WODC to map the extent of mosque funding from abroad, but that did not yield anything. Now it turns out that the government had information on this dating from 2010, but apparently did not share this with the WODC researchers.

Funding from conservative Gulf States is a controversial topic in the Netherlands, due to concerns that the funding comes with obligations to promote their fundamentalist variant of Islam, Salafism, in Dutch places of worship.

And there seems to be some truth in that, according to Nieuwsuur and NRC. Four years ago the Netherlands counted 13 Salafist mosques, now there are 27. The number of Salafist preachers increased from 50 to 110 in that same period, the news services report based on a confidential memo from counter-terrorism coordinator NCTV, which they have in their possession.

Nieuwsuur calls it remarkable that the NCTV has this information, because last year Prime Minister Mark Rutte told the Tweede Kamer, the lower house of Dutch parliament, that it is impossible to give an overview on the number of Salafist organizations in the Netherlands.

In a reaction the Ministry of Foreign Affairs told Nieuwsuur that the government kept these lists confidential because they were obtained from "diplomatic traffic". The Ministry fears that the Gulf countries will refuse to share this information if the lists become public.

SP parliamentarian Sadet Karabulut is shocked by this revelation. "We have not progressed a millimeter over the past years", she said to Nieuwsuur. "At first it was denied that there was a list, then it became a secret list, and now it is finally public."

She added that so far there hasn't been a single member of government that "addressed this issue head on". It is now up to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to take the lead and address this. "Because it's an international problem. It involves the influencing of our country by the Gulf States. It is no longer religion, it's political, ideological influence. It's political indoctrination."

Gert-Jan Segers, leader of government party ChristenUnie, was also surprised. The Gulf states are exporting unrest through influence in the mosques, he said to Nieuwsuur. "It's about the freedom we have here. There is an ideology of non-freedom against our rule of law." The ChristenUnie's position, which is also included in the Rutte III government agreement, is that no money flows from non-free countries to religious organizations should be allowed.

Segers thinks that the Ministry of Justice and Security must now take the lead.

More like this

Image
Dick Schoof
Dutch PM applauds Israel-Hamas ceasefire as "major breakthrough"
Image
PVV leader Geert Wilders during the first parliamentary debate in the Tweede Kamer on the election results. 13 December 2023.
Half of PVV voters think Wilders has conceded too much during Cabinet formation process
Image
Mosque in the Netherlands
Teacher at Veenendaal Islamic Center preaching hatred toward non-Muslims: report
Image
The Hague City Hall, designed by architect Richard Meier, in 2016
At least six parties will be needed for new coalition in The Hague, advisor says
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • PVV provincial politician convicted for driving into climate activist in Haarlem
  • Amsterdam preparing for unrest as World Cup with late-night matches kicks off
  • Three killed including two kids after car hits school camp cyclists in Zeeland; 4 hurt
  • Cop who fatally shot teen near Rotterdam-area McDonald’s will not face charges
  • “Multiple” victims after car strikes cyclists in Zeeland; Several children hurt

Top stories

  • Three killed including two kids after car hits school camp cyclists in Zeeland; 4 hurt
  • Dutch worried about crumbling international legal order, Netherlands' resilience
  • Dutch State considering buying shares in shipbuilder Damen
  • Number of international students at Dutch universities falls for first time in 20 years
  • Backpacks on flagpoles: 182,000 secondary school students find out if they're graduating

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

Footer menu

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