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April 26, 2020

The Netherlands to immigrants: Speak Dutch - by Patrick Cox

In Hassnae Bouazza's memory, learning to speak Dutch happened very suddenly.

“I remember very vividly the moment that I realized that I had learned Dutch,” Bouazza said. “I was playing with children at kindergarten. All of sudden realized, I speak Dutch.”

Bouazza, now in her 40s, is the youngest of seven siblings. Her family moved to the Netherlands from Morocco in the 1970s after her father left Morocco to seek work in Europe. In 1977, the rest of the family joined him and settled in a Dutch village — the only immigrants to live there.

This Moroccan family might have been called model immigrants, if the Dutch government had a model in mind. As Dutch speakers, the family was different from the vast majority of immigrants who moved to Dutch cities, but remained largely separated from Dutch society.

“Nothing was done to integrate them in the society,” said Ricky van Oers, an immigration law professor at Radboud University in Nijmegen. “The authorities thought too easily of asking someone to come over to work, stay for 20 years and then go back.”

Large-scale migration from Morocco to the Netherlands started in the 1960s under a guest worker program largely geared toward temporary work for men. But many immigrants decided to stay, and in the 1970s, family reunification law allowed guest laborers to bring their families to join them.

When Dutch officials realized that families from Morocco and elsewhere weren’t returning to their homelands, they tried to get them to learn Dutch. When that only partially worked — it was too late for many — attitudes hardened.

Anti-immigrant sentiment increased around Sept. 11, 2001, when a series of anti-immigrant political parties started winning seats in Dutch elections. Today, the leader of that faction is Geert Wilders.

“There is a lot of Moroccan scum in Holland who make the streets unsafe,” Wilders told reporters during the 2017 election campaign in which his party came in second.

Wilders and his followers have pushed exclusionary language laws for immigrants. That message is gaining popularity: The Dutch government requires people who want long-term work permits to take private Dutch classes and pass a language proficiency exam.

“If they don't pass this exam within three years, they are fined,” Radboud University’s Van Oers said.

“The Netherlands can be perceived as sort of a guiding country. It is very proud to have taken up that role. And you see that different European countries have copied the Dutch model.”

Those efforts are also inspiring the Trump administration. In May 2019, the White House proposed an overhaul of US immigration law that would include language proficiency regulations.

“Future immigrants will be required to learn English and to pass a civics exam prior to admission,” President Donald Trump told reporters at the Rose Garden announcement. Currently, there is no indication that Congress would pass such a measure.

Read more at: The Netherlands to immigrants: Speak Dutch | Public Radio International

April 23, 2020

The Netherlands: Hospital admissions, deaths show steady downward trend

There has been a slight
rise in the number of coronavirus patients admitted to hospital, the
Dutch public health institute RIVM said on Thursday.

The number of new admissions, 137, is up 13 on Wednesday and takes the
total number of admissions since the pandemic began to 10,158.

The official death toll rose by 123, taking the official total to 4,177.
However, the real figure could be as much as twice as high, because
only people who have tested for the disease are included.

Nevertheless, the number of both hospital admissions and deaths continue
to show a steady decrease, the RIVM said.

Read more at DutchNews.nl:There has been a slight rise in the number of coronavirus patients admitted to hospital, the Dutch public health institute RIVM said on Thursday.
There has been a slight rise in the number of coronavirus patients admitted to hospital, the Dutch public health institute RIVM said on Thursday.

The number of new admissions, 137, is up 13 on Wednesday and takes the total number of admissions since the pandemic began to 10,158. The official death toll rose by 123, taking the official total to 4,177.

However, the real figure could be as much as twice as high, because only people who have tested for the disease are included. Nevertheless, the number of both hospital admissions and deaths continue to show a steady decrease, the RIVM said.

Read more at: Hospital admissions, deaths show steady downward trend: RIVM - DutchNews.nl

Global Coronavirus forecast: WHO warns coronavirus to 'be with us for long time':

 The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said there were "worrying upward trends" in early epidemics in parts of Africa and central and South America, warning that the "virus will be with us for a long time".

 More than 2.5 million people around the world have been diagnosed with the coronavirus. At least 178,000 have died, with the US accounting for about a quarter of all deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

The United Nations is warning global hunger could double as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, putting 265 million people at risk. 

Read more at: WHO warns coronavirus to 'be with us for long time': Live updates | News | Al Jazeera

April 22, 2020

Turkey′s Erdogan clamps down further on media amid corononavirus crises

The Turkish president seems to be using the coronavirus crisis as a pretext to get rid of the few critical media outlets left in his country. Opposition politicians and journalists fear a new spate of censorship.

Read more at;
https://www.dw.com/en/turkeys-erdogan-clamps-down-further-on-media-amid-coronavirus-crisis/a-53192898

April 21, 2020

USA Immigration: Trump to sign order to suspend immigration into U.S. - Reuters

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday he will be signing an executive order to temporarily suspend immigration into the United States amid the ongoing coronavirus outbreak.

Read more at:
https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-health-coronavirus-usa-immigration/trump-to-sign-order-to-suspend-immigration-into-u-s-idUKKBN223087

April 20, 2020

Coronavirus: 'Possible to be infected with Covid-19 more than once'

The leader of a team working on a coronavirus vaccine says scientists believe its possible to become infected with Covid-19 more than once.