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 moored at the EuroMax shipping terminal in the Port of Rotterdam
Container ship moored at the EuroMax shipping terminal in the Port of Rotterdam - Credit: Foto-VDW / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Crime
Business
drug trafficking
cocaine
Port of Rotterdam
AIVD
screening
certificate of good conduct
Ministry of Justice and Security
Wednesday, 22 March 2023 - 09:45

Share this article:

Thousands of Rotterdam port workers to be screened for links to drug crime

Companies in the port of Rotterdam will team up with intelligence service AIVD to screen thousands of employees and drivers for criminal offenses linked to drug crime. It involves employees in positions interesting for drug traffickers, like planners at terminals and truck drivers, Trouw reports.

Some port companies already use a standard certificate of good conduct to screen employees. In the new screening, the screening authority, Justis, will look specifically for cases relevant to drugs and drug smuggling. Employees will have to reapply for this special certificate of good conduct periodically. This form of screening by the AIVD is also used for Schiphol employees.

Employees with drug-linked offenses on their records will be denied access to the port area. The first group of employees will be screened this year. “The pilot has just started in Rotterdam, and it is expected that tens of thousands of employees will be eligible for this [screening],” a spokesperson for the Ministry of Justice and Security said to the newspaper.

The port of Rotterdam is one of Europe’s main entry points in global cocaine trafficking. Criminals threaten, coerce, or bribe employees and truck drivers with access passes to enter the port area or move containers. Young men are often also sent into the port to retrieve drugs from containers. In the first two months of this year, the police arrested over 80 such retrievers in and around the port area.

The Rotterdam authorities are stepping up the fight against drug trafficking, and screening employees is part of that. The Netherlands and Belgium recently also announced that they would work with shipping companies to tackle the drug trade through their ports.

More like this

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
Dutch customs officers opening a container
Cannabis replacing cocaine in drug trafficking through Rotterdam port
Image
3,600 kilograms of cocaine, worth €270 million, intercepted at the port of Vlissingen, 19 June 2024
Dutch drug seizures fall sharply in first half of 2024; Cocaine total down 42 percent
Image
8,064 kilos of cocaine hidden in banana pallets found at the port of Rotterdam, 10 August 2023.
Cocaine seizures neared 60,000 kg last year; Criminals shifting away from Rotterdam port
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Arne Slot, Dutch manager of Liverpool FC, fired after disappointing second season
  • Venlo man who escaped Roermond hospital custody arrested in Düsseldorf
  • Maastricht municipality says excavation of possible D’Artagnan remains was illegal
  • Tourist randomly stabbed at Rotterdam’s Slinge Metro station; Suspect arrested
  • De Jong shocks French Open, defeating Khachanov; To take on Zverev in quarterfinal

Top stories

  • Lightning storms ignite multiple house fires, paralyze rail travel across Netherlands
  • New Amsterdam-Paris train from €19 will stop in Haarlem, The Hague, Roosendaal & Gent
  • Police arrest 35-year-old man after youth soccer leader found dead in Herpen ditch
  • Urgent Code Orange warning issued as heavy storms hit eastern Netherlands
  • Prosecutors target alleged drug profits of former Oranje international Quincy Promes

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

Footer menu

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