2007 in the Netherlands

This article lists some of the events that took place in the Netherlands in 2007.

Year in the Netherlands:
Other years
2005 | 2006 | 2007 (2007) | 2008 | 2009

Incumbents

Events

January

February

March

  • March 7: Provincial elections are held in the twelve Provinces of the Netherlands.
  • March 11: Riots break out in the Ondiep district of Utrecht, after a police officer shoots dead a 54-year-old resident.

October

  • October 1: Former House of Representatives member Ayaan Hirsi Ali returns to the Netherlands. The Dutch government refused to pay for her security measures in the United States any longer.
  • October 9: Former lawyer Bram Zeegers is found dead in his home in Amsterdam. Zeegers was a key prosecution witness in the trial of Willem Holleeder. An autopsy showed an overdose of methylenedioxymethamphetamine in combination with excessive alcohol consumption.
  • October 10: A referendum on the new mayor of Utrecht fails, with a turnout of less than 10%. There were two candidates: Aleid Wolfsen and Ralph Pans, both of the Labour Party. A mayor in the Netherlands is appointed by Queen Beatrix or by the Minister of the Interior and Kingdom Relations, but a city council may hold a non-binding referendum on the issue.
  • October 11: After the mayoral referendum of October 10, the city council of Utrecht nominates Aleid Wolfsen to become the next mayor.
  • October 11: A 16-year-old pupil of a high school in Amsterdam is stabbed to death by a 14-year-old class mate. The victim had allegedly made a joke about the surname of the perpetrator.
  • October 14: A 22-year-old schizophrenic man is shot dead in a police station in Slotervaart, Amsterdam, after stabbing two police officers. The death leads to riots in the Slotervaart borough.
  • October 15: Rita Verdonk announces that she will leave the House of Representatives parliamentary group of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, and that she will remain in the House as an independent member.
  • October 17: House of Representatives member Rita Verdonk, who had been expelled from the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, announces that she will form a new movement, Proud of the Netherlands.
  • October 20: Princess Ariane is baptized in the Kloosterkerk in The Hague.
  • October 22: A fire in the Armando Museum in Amersfoort destroys 19 paintings and a sculpture of artist Armando. Other works of art lost in the fire include Melencolia I by Albrecht Dürer and paintings by Salomon van Ruysdael, Hercules Seghers and Anselm Kiefer. It was the first museum fire in the Netherlands since the fire in the Schielandshuis in Rotterdam in 1864.
  • October 26: The royal family seeks an injunction against pro-pedophilia organisation MARTIJN. The organisation had refused to remove pictures of Princess Catharina-Amalia (daughter of crown prince Willem-Alexander) and of Anna and Lucas van Lippe-Biesterfeld van Vollenhoven (children of Prince Maurits) from its website, which the royal family had demanded.
  • October 26: The city council of Almere approves plans to expand the city to 350,000 inhabitants by the year 2030, twice its current size.
  • October 29: Adnan al-Mansouri reports that his father, Iranian-Dutch human rights activist Abdullah al-Mansouri, has received the death penalty in Iran, on allegations of terrorism. Al-Mansouri had been arrested in Syria in May 2006, and had been extradited to Iran. Several political parties call on the government to do the utmost to rescue Al-Mansouri's life.
  • October 30: Fugitive Belgian criminal Nordin Benallal is arrested after a robbery in The Hague. Benallal had escaped from a maximum security prison in Ittre, Belgium on October 28
  • October 31: Hans van den Hende succeeds Tiny Muskens as Bishop of Breda.

November

  • November 1: A judge in Amsterdam orders pro-pedophilia organisation MARTIJN to remove pictures of Princess Catharina-Amalia (daughter of crown prince Willem-Alexander) and of Anna and Lucas van Lippe-Biesterfeld van Vollenhoven (children of Prince Maurits) from its website.
  • November 3: Press agency Geassocieerde Pers Diensten accuses the Communications department of the Ministry of Social Affairs and Employment of illegally accessing draft articles. Two employees of the Ministry, both former journalists for the press agency, are suspended, one journalist of the press agency quits, after admitting he supplied a password to the press agency's internal computer system to a spokesperson of the ministry.
  • November 5: A. F. Th. van der Heijden wins the 2007 AKO Literatuurprijs for his novel Het Schervengericht.
  • November 8–9: The Netherlands and Great Britain are hit by a North Sea flood. The storm surge barriers Oosterscheldekering, Hartelkering and Maeslantkering are closed, the latter for the first time since its opening in 1997.
  • November 12: The prosecution asks a 12-year prison sentence for Willem Holleeder, who is on trial for extortion.
  • November 12: Minister of Economic Affairs Maria van der Hoeven launches an investigation into the possibilities of a Dutch bid for the 2028 Summer Olympics.

December

Sport

See also

Births

Deaths

January

February

  • February 2: Pieter Nouwen, 57, journalist and author.
  • February 6: Coen van Hoewijk, 84, journalist, first newsreader in the country
  • February 7: Thijs Roks, 76, cyclist, first Dutch cyclist in the Giro d'Italia, 1955 national champion
  • February 7: Pieter Stolk, 61, musician and conductor, i.a. for Evangelische Omroep
  • February 9: Harry Lockefeer, 68, journalist, former editor-in-chief of de Volkskrant, professor of Journalism at the University of Groningen
  • February 12: Dé Stoop, 87, former chairman of FC Amsterdam, former board member of the Royal Dutch Football Association.
  • February 17: Nedim Imac, 40, businessman, chairman of FC Türkiyemspor, shot dead.
  • February 18: Caesarius Mommers, 81, friar and educationist, established a method to teach children how to read and spell that is being used to this day.
  • February 20: Hilde van der Ploeg, 47, clinical psychologist and sexologist.
  • February 21: Klaas Knol, 78, child pulmonologist
  • February 22: Fons Rademakers, 86, Academy Award winning film producer, director and actor.
  • February 24: Lex van Rossen, 57, pop music photographer.
  • February 26: John Groot, 45, photographer and business man, drowned.

August

October

November

December

Sports

See worldwide 2007 in sports

See also

References

    External ink

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