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Nieuws uit 2006

26 April 2006

Open borders: Employment Secretary's climbdown still not enough

Secretary of State for Social Affairs and Employment Henk Van Hoof is to abandon his plans to complete the opening of borders on 1st May, a move which would have meant allowing in more people from central and eastern europe to be exploited as cheap labour. For the time being the work permit system will be maintained. SP Member of Parliament Jan de Wit, commenting on the climbdown, said: “The Secretary of State has had to make a major change of direction. The unconditional liberalisation of the labour market is off the agenda, and that is to be welcomed. But the measures which he is taking are not going to be effective and are certainly no guarantee of equal pay for equal work.”

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26 April 2006

International Workers' Memorial Day dedicated to asbestos victims

International Workers' Memorial Day, which falls on 28 April, will this year be dedicated to asbestos victims. The day (which began in the United States, where "Memorial Day" has long been an annual event to pay tribute to US soldiers, sailors and airmen killed in wars) is intended to draw attention to the terrible toll, warlike in its proportions, taken by industrial accidents and diseases, most of which are avoidable. The dedication to victims of asbestos is a direct consequence of the international asbestos conference organised last year by the SP. On Workers' Memorial Day this year, SP Euro-MP Kartika Liotard will, at a press conference at half past two that afternoon, present a publication bringing together the various contributions to the conference.

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26 April 2006

SP: reclaim ‘Strasbourg’ rent

The European Parliament appears to have been for some years the victim of a swindle in which the City of Strasbourg has been demanding excessive rent for the parliament buildings. Commenting on the affair, SP Euro-MP Erik Meijer said “It's one thing to have that confirmed, and quite another to get anything done about it. I propose that the overpayment should simply be claimed back. This seems to me to be both logical and just."

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25 April 2006

Punitive action needed to counter misuse of developing countries for medical experiments

The SP is seeking an immediate clarification regarding an illegal experiment alleged to have been carried out in India on a new pharmaceutical. The experiment was the subject of revelations made today on the television programme “Netwerk”. SP Member of Parliament and health spokeswoman Agnes Kant, commenting on the affair, said: "If is confirmed that under the guise of a conventional contract an experiment was carried out illegally on a pharmaceutical product, the so-called 'Axxion-stents' produced by the Dutch firm Occan, this is from an ethical point of view entirely unacceptable, as it would mean that people in developing countries would be irresponsibly exposed to enormous health risks."

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21 April 2006

Netherlands must demand improvement in spending of EU moneys in Russia

SP Member of Parliament and European affairs spokesman Harry van Bommel has asked Secretary of State Atzo Nicolaï for clarification regarding the spending of EU subsidies in Russia, arguing that the Netherlands must put the European Commission under pressure to take steps to improve the effectiveness of subsidised projects. Mr Van Bommel's request was prompted by the damning judgement of the European Court of Auditors in relation to these subsidies.

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19 April 2006

SP holds 27 key decision-making positions in 20 local authorities

Local elections in the Netherlands are usually followed in each town or district by complex negotiations between the various parties. Eventually two, three or more parties will reach an agreement and take office, forming what is known as a “college” to run the local authority. Members of these colleges are known as “wethouders” (literally 'keepers of the law'), roughly equivalent to Committee Chairs in the system used in England and Wales and many parts of the US, or to Conveners in Scotland. These colleges may be made up of parties of the left and centre-left, or of the various centre-right parties, but they often bring together elements from across the political spectrum.

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