Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Dutch agency spying on Holocaust survivors for years ‘defies any idea of civilization’

“That cannot be justified, not even with time,” said Jacques Grishaver, chair of the Dutch Auschwitz Committee.

AIVD
Aerial view of the headquarters of the Dutch intelligence agency AIVD. Credit: Aerovista Luchtfotografie/Shutterstock.

The predecessor of the General Intelligence and Security Service in the Netherlands (AIVD), called the BVD, regarded Holocaust survivors who were part of the Dutch Auschwitz Committee as extremists and spied on them in the 1980s.

That’s according to an analysis of 71,000 declassified documents by the Amsterdam daily Het Parool.

The Dutch agency issued a statement that Holocaust survivors weren’t deemed a threat, but this particular group was “a communist front organization.”

“These were different times, but the fact that you are going to make a report about Auschwitz commemorations, about the people who came there to remember their family that had been massacred, to embed the BVD there? It defies any idea of civilization,” said Jacques Grishaver, who chairs the Dutch Auschwitz Committee.

“That cannot be justified,” he said. “Not even with time.”

The defendants, Adam Bedoui and Abdelkader Amir Bousloub, are from Hillingdon in west London.
Antisemitic attacks against Canadians total about 20 per day, Ambassador Iddo Moed said.
The Palestinian Authority “didn’t even try to argue that the prisoner wasn’t entitled to a salary but instead claimed some technical rationale behind the suspension,” Palestinian Media Watch reports.
“Such hate has no place in our schools or our state, especially as we begin Jewish American Heritage Month,” said Maryland Gov. Wes Moore.
“While our ability to provide additional information at this time is limited, we will continue to keep the community informed,” the private D.C. university stated.
“This is not a prank. It was an act of intimidation meant to spread fear,” Vince Gasparro, a Liberal parliamentarian, told JNS.