
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
AMSTERDAM (Worthy News) – Pro-Palestine protesters, many covering their faces and shouting antisemitic slogans, returned to the streets of Amsterdam, where they occupied a site of a major university and further threatened Jewish students and others.
An angry crowd entered the Binnengasthuis area, which once hosted one of Amsterdam’s leading hospitals and is now part of the University of Amsterdam (UvA), but police did not yet intervene.
The protest came hours after police broke up a pro-Palestine camp in the area and detained some 125 people.
Witnesses said entrances to the site were blocked from several sides. The barricades includes pallets and bicycle racks as well chairs, tables, and construction fences.
Bricks were being removed in anticipation of a police crackdown.
With tensions running high, angry protesters entered The Amsterdam Academic Club, painting graffiti texts such as “Free Palestine” and “UvA your hands are bloody.”
Their protest seemed well organized: Demonstrators stood in rows next to each other to pass the bricks to each other. Furniture in the building has been used for the barricades.
SITTING ON FLOOR
Some protesters, estimated to be in their 20s, sat on the floor in one corner there amid a mountain of food, including cookies, fruit, and water. There were also packs of sanitary towels.
There were similar scenes early Wednesday in the city of Utrecht, some 45 kilometers (28 miles) outside Amsterdam, where Utrecht University, backed by police, ordered the “pro-Palestine demonstrators” to leave the courtyard of the University library. “Partly because the house rules were not followed, serious concerns arose about safety,” said a university spokeswoman. Some protesters were detained.
As in Amsterdam, protesters demand that their university break off all ties with Israel, including active collaborations with Israeli institutions and organizations.
Several Jewish people have expressed concerns about what they view as mounting antisemitism with protesters shouting: “From the River to the Sea, Palestine will be Free.”
Jewish students and pro-Israel protesters have been attacked including those carrying the Israeli flags, Worthy News learned.
Yet unlike on Tuesday, Amsterdam police did not yet intervene early Wednesday. The crowd was cheering when police announced they would not take action against the demonstrators “for the time being.”
“The ‘triangle’ body [of mayor, police and prosecutors] is currently not taking any action against the occupation of the Binnengasthuis site. The UvA has not reported any violations and has not asked the activists to leave,” the police statement said.
‘MORE TIME NEEDED’
The university suggested that it “needs more time to consult with the students and to de-escalate. Therefore, the police are not entitled to enter.”
The decision came hours after police broke up a pro-Palestine camp inside the campus.
However this time “the risk of escalation and disorder is high in the absence of sufficient preparation time and agents,” the UvA said.
Critics say the unwillingness to intervene could lead to more chaos in the Netherlands, long a liberal nation.
However voters have already expressed concern about growing hatred toward Jews and the rising influence of Islam, with migrants arriving by the thousands from Islamic nations.
After elections in November, the anti-Islam Party for Freedom led by pro-Israel politician Geert Wilders became the largest political force in Parliament.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
A Christian widow in Pakistan’s Punjab province is devastated after her married daughter went missing, while elsewhere in the region, a mother of four and a mother of six have also disappeared following alleged abductions by Muslim men, Worthy News learned Saturday.
South Korea, long seen as the democratic opposite of its authoritarian-ruled northern neighbor, faces growing scrutiny for what critics call a widening crackdown on Christian leaders and churches.
Hungary’s prime minister told U.S. President Donald J. Trump on Friday that it would take a miracle for Ukraine to win the war against Russia. Viktor Orbán made the remarks at the White House, where Trump asked him during a joint news conference about the prospects for Kyiv’s victory.
Hungarian prosecutors have requested a two-year suspended prison sentence for Gábor Iványi, a 76-year-old Methodist pastor, once a close confidant of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, and several opposition politicians, in a case widely viewed as politically charged.
In a decision that could reshape federal identification standards, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday allowed the Trump administration to enforce its policy requiring Americans to list their biological sex–male or female–on passports, rather than self-identified gender.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R–S.D.) told Republican senators Thursday to prepare for a critical Friday vote aimed at ending the nation’s longest-ever government shutdown — now in its sixth week — as lawmakers scramble to reach a deal amid growing economic strain and partisan stalemate.
The Senate on Thursday narrowly rejected a Democratic resolution that would have required President Donald Trump to seek congressional approval before taking military action against Venezuela, marking the second failed attempt in as many months to rein in the administration’s campaign targeting Venezuelan drug-trafficking vessels.