Amsterdam’s mayor condemned the attacks on the Israeli fans, some of whom had been chanting anti-Arab slogans, saying there was “no excuse.” Police said five people were sent to the hospital.
There are concerns the unrest has damaged community relations and tensions have spilled over into politics too.
A week after Israeli soccer fans were attacked in the streets of Amsterdam, triggering damning accusations of a "Jew hunt" in a city with an ugly history of antisemitism, a clearer picture of what ...
As incidents of both antisemitic and Islamaphobic abuse surge across Europe, a soccer match between Israel’s Maccabi Tel Aviv ...
The warning comes after the city extended a ban on protests through Thursday. Additional protests occurred Monday anyways, when dozens of people armed with sticks and firecrackers set a tram on fire.
A total of eight people were being held in connection with last week’s violence, and unrest in the largest city in the ...
Police have detained dozens of people for taking part in a demonstration in central Amsterdam that had been outlawed ...
The order prohibited wearing face masks or face coverings and stepped up security at Jewish institutions. It also gave police power to stop and search people.
The mayor of the Netherlands’ capital Amsterdam, Femke Halsema, condemned the attacks on Israeli and Jewish people following ...
Violence after a soccer game in Amsterdam shocks both Dutch and Israeli authorities.
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof on Saturday canceled a trip to United Nations climate talks in Azerbaijan so that he can ...
Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema on Friday said that a ban on protests will be in place through Sunday, and that there will be a bolstered police presence. She also banned “face-covering clothing” and ...