Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
container ship MSC Lorena
container ship MSC Lorena - Credit: Alf van Beem / Wikimedia - License: All Rights Reserved
Crime
Dilan Yeşilgöz-Zegerius
Port of Rotterdam
port of Antwerp
Rotterdam
Antwerp
shipping company
drug trafficking
cocaine
Ministry of Justice and Security
Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management
Mark Harbers
Belgium
Annelies Verlinden
Friday, 17 February 2023 - 15:40

Share this article:

Netherlands, Belgium ask shipping companies to help fight drug trafficking

The Netherlands and Belgium will engage shipping companies to help in the fight against drug trafficking through the ports of Rotterdam and Antwerp. This afternoon, representatives of the Dutch and Belgian Cabinets, the mayors of Rotterdam and Antwerp, and the five largest shipping companies in the world will make agreements on fighting drug imports, NOS reports.

The core of the agreements is that shipping companies will provide containers with a digital seal, which sets off an alarm if the container is opened before its destination. That should make it more challenging to hide cocaine between shipments of other goods en route to the European ports.

People who come to collect a container will also have to identify themselves with a fingerprint. And the shipping companies will give the authorities more insight into the routes that the containers travel.

Drug trafficking through the Rotterdam and Antwerp ports is a massive problem. Last year, authorities seized a record amount of cocaine at Antwerp. And the gangs involved in the trafficking are extremely violent.

“The government cannot tackle this massive problem alone,” Minister Dilan Yeşilgöz-Zegerius of Justice and Security said on Op1 on Thursday.

Minister Mark Harbers of Infrastructure said that shipping companies are eager to do their part in fighting this crime. “It is also in their own interest. Their employees are also being recruited and harassed,” he said on the talk show.

The Belgian Interior Minister Annelies Verlinden: “They tell us that people may no longer want to work for them because they are afraid.” People who work in crucial positions in a terminal or at a shipping company often face threats if they don’t want to cooperate with drug traffickers, she said.

More like this

Image
Crime scene tape with a police car in the background
Explosive attacks, abduction in Netherlands linked to cocaine robbery in Antwerp
Image
Over 7,700 kilograms of cocaine found in a shipment of bananas. The drugs arrived in Antwerp and were found in Bleiswijk. 16 October 2023
Over 7,700 kg of cocaine, worth hundreds of millions, seized in Zuid-Holland
Image
5,160 kilos cocaine found in a rice container from Paraguay at the port of Antwerp, 12 June 2022
Cabinet wants maximum drug smuggling sentences raised from 12 to 16 years
Image
MSC container ships at the MSC terminal at the Antwerp port. July 2013
MSC container ship anchored in the North Sea after bomb threat
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Online retailer Wehkamp acquired by Dutch fashion group Omoda
  • Stretch your holiday pay: Bunq makes vakantiegeld last with 2.51% savings interest promo
  • British man, 21, missing since Rotterdam TwitchCon visit found dead
  • Esther Ouwehand steps down as Partij voor de Dieren leader after seven years
  • British man stabbed to death in Heerhugowaard was wanted for Amsterdam double murder

Top stories

  • Dutch companies imported €2 billion worth of dangerous designer drugs from India
  • Rate of birth complications higher in poorer neighborhoods
  • At least 8 Dutch men suspected of drugging, raping, filming their wives, girlfriends
  • Court rules Ye can remain in Netherlands for Arnhem performances this week
  • New A'dam coalition planning parking +tourist tax hike, free public transport for kids

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

Footer menu

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