2025, Criminal Immigration Blocks EU Development.

The United Nations and the European Union, as supranational organizations, are increasingly dictating criminal immigration. Immigrants are called refugees, while more than 90% of immigrants to the Netherlands and Europe come through human traffickers. The UN and the EU call refugees victims, entirely in line with the communist identity politics. Human traffickers, the Western judiciary and NGOs that support the UN and the EU to destabilize Western culture through insecurity, favoritism, and the obstruction of normal development.

The Prison Service has reported that prisoners in the Netherlands are relatively often male (94%) and often have a migration background (approximately 70% in 2023), with almost half born outside the Netherlands (47%). This overrepresentation of migrants and people with a migration background is greater than in the general population and is related to factors such as a lower level of education and unfavorable family circumstances. Origin groups such as Dutch-Caribbean, Somali, and Moroccan are relatively common in police statistics. Immigration fuels crime in the Netherlands.

Since the migration crisis of 2015, migrant smuggling has increased significantly. According to Europol and Interpol, more than 90% of irregular migrants pay smugglers in their attempt to reach Europe. This is a highly lucrative business for criminal networks, and the chance of being caught is small. 90% of migrants pay smugglers to reach Europe. Migrant smuggling is estimated to generate an annual global turnover of €4.7 to €6 billion. The European Union is doing nothing about it. Asylum immigration is fueled by criminal human trafficking.

There are thousands of immigrants in the Netherlands without valid residence documents (i.e., no passport or residence permit). Estimates range from tens of thousands to as many as 58,000. In addition, there are approximately 27,000 stateless people who also struggle with documentation, while 56% of asylum seekers cannot produce a passport upon application. By law, an immigrant always needs a valid travel document (passport or ID card) to enter and reside in the Netherlands, and to travel within Europe; this document proves their identity and nationality. The Netherlands and Europe do not enforce the requirement to show identification, which increases the insecurity.

The number of children in the Netherlands has shown a downward trend since the turn of the century, with the annual birth rate falling from over 200,000 to approximately 164,500 in 2023. Although there was a slight increase between 2020-2021 and the figures fluctuate slightly in 2024 and 2025, the general trend of fewer births and a decreasing share of young children in the population is clear. This has led to an aging population, with a larger proportion of elderly people and a smaller proportion of 0-19 year-olds. Young people want a home to marry and have children, which is not possible in the current political structure. It is clear that favoring immigrants in the allocation of social housing hinders the normal development of the population.

Statistics Netherlands (CBS) omits the origin of immigrants in its crime and population statistics, creating a distorted picture. The Prison Service discreetly reflects reality. The politicized Statistics Netherlands (CBS) provides insufficient information for the legislature on the relationship between immigration and crime. The Senate also noted this in 2017.

The National Rapporteur on Human Trafficking is concerned about the visibility of the number of human trafficking victims in the Netherlands. The annual report published today shows that only 814 victims were reported to the Coordination Centre against Human Trafficking (Comensha) in 2022. An estimated 5,000 human trafficking victims occur in the Netherlands annually.

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