Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Undated photo of children playing outside at an residential complex for asylum seekers in the Netherlands
Undated photo of children playing outside at an residential complex for asylum seekers in the Netherlands - Credit: COA / Inge van Mill - License: All Rights Reserved
Politics
COA
Ministry of Justice and Security
asylum
aslum shelter
asylum seeker
Ter Apel
Monday, 19 February 2024 - 08:07

Share this article:

Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window

Contracts for more than half of asylum shelter locations expire this year

The Netherlands shortage in asylum shelter space is about to get much worse. The contracts for over half of existing shelters expire this year, Trouw reports based on figures from the Central Agency for the Reception of Asylum Seekers (COA).

The contracts for 180 of the 326 reception locations expire in 2024. It mainly concerns emergency shelters in vacant buildings, sports halls, ships, and tents. Approximately 24,000 shelter places - 37 percent of the total - will disappear.

At the same time, the COA and government are battling with municipalities to create more shelters, and the number of people seeking safety in the Netherlands is increasing. The new asylum distribution law, with which the government obliges municipalities to do their part in asylum reception, should help create more space. But it can often take months to, for example, turn an empty office building into somewhere suitable for people to live.

A week and a half ago, outgoing State Secretary Eric van der Burg (Asylum Affairs) asked provinces to extend expiring contracts or create new shelters to replace them. No one has yet responded, according to Trouw.

The COA faces its first deadline tomorrow. The court ordered it to ensure that no more than the agreed-upon 2,000 people are sheltered in the registration center in Ter Apel. Before the weekend, 2,200 people were staying at the shelter, Van der Burg said on Friday. He added that he was “not at all hopeful” that they’ll meet the deadline.

If they fail, the COA must pay a fine of 15,000 euros for every day that the 2,000 limit is exceeded, up to a maximum of 1.5 million euros. The money will go to the municipality of Westerwolde, which covers the village of Ter Apel.

More like this

Image
A small group of people gathered at the Ter Apel asylum seeker reception center in November 2014
Dutch asylum agency to pay first €15,000 fine for overcrowded Ter Apel reception center
Image
A small group of people gathered at the Ter Apel asylum seeker reception center in November 2014
Overcrowded Ter Apel unsafe for locals and asylum seekers, emotional mayor says in court
Image
An asylum shelter in Zeewolde
Unaccompanied child asylum seekers relatively often suspected of crimes
Image
Red Cross volunteers speaking with people arriving at the asylum registration center in Ter Apel, May 2026
Ter Apel asylum shelter will soon turn kids away, Red Cross warns as temps rise to 32°C
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Trump administration starts campaign to "isolate" ICC for its "war" on U.S.
  • OLVG hospital in Amsterdam starts trial with late abortions
  • One killed in stabbing on Roermond street; Suspect arrested
  • Netherlands to start military exercises with Ukraine, help design new air defense system
  • Netherlands has Europe’s highest highway gasoline prices; Spain is cheapest

Top stories

  • OLVG hospital in Amsterdam starts trial with late abortions
  • One killed in stabbing on Roermond street; Suspect arrested
  • Netherlands to start military exercises with Ukraine, help design new air defense system
  • Ter Apel asylum center area declared safety risk zone after recent stabbings, fights
  • Suspect in ABN Amro worker's fatal stabbing also harassed four other women

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

Footer menu

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