The Dutch government has installed a new "discrimination test" that can detect and prevent ethnic profiling in government policy and automated systems. The announcement was made by the caretaker home affairs minister Judith Uitermark at a national congress against discrimination and racism in the Queensland town of Townsville, which is being attended by 800 delegates.
5 months Ago
Racism is a serious problem in the Netherlands, and Uitermark stressed this. She admitted, however, that in 2023, one in ten people felt discriminated against, according to official data. Among the most common types were race, nationality, and gender discrimination.
“One study found that 29% of civil servants with a migrant background experienced racism,” Uitermark said.
She also alluded to the fallout of the childcare benefits scandal whereby tens of thousands of parents — mostly dual nationals — were falsely accused of fraud, acknowledging that the government had been complicit in racist policies.
New 10-Point Manifesto Against Discrimination
In addition to this initiative, Rabin Baldewsingh, the national coordinator for discrimination and racism, has introduced a 10-point manifesto.
This is an election manifesto piece addressed to the political parties that has three focuses – it calls to end exclusion in public services, housing, and the Caribbean, defends the rights of young people, and is a manifest piece as part of our ELECTION PACK.
Reading from a prepared speech, King Willem-Alexander said he would reprise the constitutional vow of equality shortly after holding a meeting for visiting US President Donald Trump. “We should all feel safe and be free,” he said.
“Inclusion is not something that will fit in the s.
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