Court orders Dutch government to scrap COVID-19 curfew

FILE PHOTO: Outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Amsterdam
People sit on terraces in Amsterdam on Oct 14, 2020. (File photo: Reuters/Eva Plevier)

AMSTERDAM: A Dutch court ordered the government on Tuesday (Feb 16) to immediately scrap the night-time curfew imposed to help limit the spread of the COVID-19, ruling that it lacks any proper legal basis.

The curfew, the first in the Netherlands since World War II, sparked several days of riots by anti-lockdown protesters when it was initially introduced on Jan 23.

"The curfew is based on a law for emergency situations, where there is no time for debate with parliament", the court in The Hague said.

"There was no such pressing need in this case. Far reaching measures such as these need to be based on proper laws."

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The court said the government had failed to make it clear why the curfew was absolutely necessary at this stage of the pandemic, as the infection rate in the Netherlands was already dropping before the measure went into effect.

The curfew, which allows only people with a pressing need to be outdoors between 9pm and 4.30am, was extended last week until at least Mar 3.

A spokeswoman for the Justice Ministry said it would need to study the court's ruling.

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Source: Reuters/kg