Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Hague police officer
A police officer in The Hague. Sept. 11, 2015 - Credit: Dutchlight / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Crime
Coronavirus
Covid-19
anti-lockdown
Netherlands in Revolt
Peter den Oudsten
police
The Hague
Hoorn
Zuid-Holland
Noord-Holland
Saturday, 4 July 2020 - 11:28

Share this article:

Utrecht preparing for violence after banning anti-lockdown protest

Authorities spent Saturday morning securing the perimeter of the Jaarbeursplein in Utrecht days after officials banned a protest against the Covid-19 social distancing measures in the Netherlands. "Netherlands in Revolt" was to hold a protest on Saturday against what they called the "1.5-meter madness," but fears of violence and rioting prompted officials to quash the event.

Investigators uncovered evidence "that a motley crew comprised of large groups of rioters want to use the demonstration to start a violent encounter," said the city's new acting mayor, Peter den Oudsten. He specified violent clashes with police as being one motive of some groups. "This will lead to serious disturbances, and, because the 1.5 meters cannot be complied with, it will also lead to health risks," said Den Oudsten.

Despite the ban, Netherlands in Revolt members planned to show up anyway, reported local broadcaster RTV Utrecht. "We hope everyone stays at home," a police spokesperson said to the broadcaster. Some 1,500 people had been expected to attend. Fencing off the square was done to make it easier to quickly close and evacuate the area if it becomes too busy.

A similar protest in The Hague last month was invaded by what Prime Minister Mark Rutte called "coked-up hooligans," leading to violent confrontations with police near the city's central train station. A protest against glorifying the Dutch colonialist past in Hoorn also attracted people who had no interest in the protest but just wanted to try and instigate a riot with police, the mayor there said in June.

More like this

Image
Snow falls on the A4 along the southern edge of Schiphol Airport, near Amsterdam and Badhoevedorp. 15 Feb. 2026
Some 575 flights cancelled, delayed at Schiphol amid snow; 50 more affected tomorrow
Image
Snowfall along the A4 south of Schiphol Airport near Roelofarendsveen, just across the border from Noord-Holland into Zuid-Holland. 15 Feb. 2026
Roads remain treacherous Sunday evening as snow and ice hit Netherlands
Image
Police at an anti-social distancing protest on the Malieveld in The Hague, 21 June 2020
The Hague was allowed to block Covid lockdown protests, Council of State rules
Image
Three women at Amsterdam's Muiderpoort Station discover most trains are not running because of a strike. 9 Sept. 2022
NS scraps 25% of Noord-Holland trains on Thursday; Best Kept Secret festival warns fans
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Nonalcoholic beer grew even more popular in 2025 as traditional lager sales fall
  • Regulator fines online auction site Ticketveiling.nl €270,000 over hidden bidding bots
  • Heat emergency declared at Groningen Marathon after several runners fall ill
  • Unions, employers hold informal talks on labor-market deal over social security cuts
  • Video: Man seriously hurt in stabbing at Rotterdam-Crooswijk apartment; Two arrested

Top stories

  • Heat emergency declared at Groningen Marathon after several runners fall ill
  • Body found in residential garden after passenger jumps from hot air balloon over Zundert
  • Unusually early heat in Netherlands gives way to cooler start of June
  • Police seek "older man in blue shirt" after fatal rail accident near Twello
  • Lightning storms ignite multiple house fires, paralyze rail travel across Netherlands

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

Footer menu

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