(THE HAGUE) A police car was torched and riot officers deployed tear gas and water cannons after an anti-asylum protest in The Hague turned violent on Saturday, September 20, 2025, underscoring rising tensions over Dutch asylum policy ahead of national political debates. Thousands gathered near the city center as masked groups threw bottles and rocks, blocked roads, and attacked a local office of the centrist Democrats 66 party.
Police stopped some demonstrators from moving toward the parliament complex, which is undergoing renovation, and arrested several participants as the evening wore on. Organizers billed the march as a stand against “mass migration,” but the event spiraled into clashes as a police car was set on fire — a scene that quickly spread across social media with the tag “asylum protest” in The Hague.

Immediate Reactions and Local Impact
The unrest drew immediate condemnation from across the political spectrum. Geert Wilders, leader of the Party for Freedom (PVV) and a frontrunner in polls ahead of the general election, denounced the violence while continuing to call for tougher migration controls. Local officials urged calm and warned that further unrest could jeopardize ongoing talks about shelter capacity, decision backlogs, and asylum rules.
For many residents, the image of a police car torched in downtown The Hague captured the growing strain between national policy ambitions and day-to-day pressures in communities hosting asylum seekers. Shopkeepers near the protest route closed early after the incident; families living near reception centers expressed fear and fatigue. Volunteers who provide food, Dutch lessons, or transport now face uncertainty about whether new laws could criminalize simple acts of support.
The scene of a police car on fire in the heart of government has become shorthand for a volatile moment in Dutch migration politics.
Police Response and Political Reactions
Authorities said they were prepared for a large crowd, but the scale of confrontation surprised even seasoned officers. Police reported injuries among officers hit by thrown objects and used crowd-control measures — including tear gas and water cannons — to push back groups trying to reach sensitive sites. While most participants marched peacefully, a core of agitators targeted police lines and property.
Political leaders condemned the violence but emphasized different policy directions:
- PVV (Geert Wilders): Pressing for deep cuts to asylum admissions and tougher deportation measures.
- Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA): Opposed criminalizing undocumented status, calling it “unacceptable.”
- Local officials & community leaders: Warned that harsh rhetoric fuels street emotions and urged a reset toward practical solutions to reduce backlogs and improve housing.
Municipal representatives and civil-society groups raised legal and practical alarms. The Association of Dutch Municipalities (VNG) warned that draft laws could create conflicts between national directives and local duties, calling parts of the package “legally untenable.” The Dutch Council for Refugees argued multiple measures would worsen life for people fleeing war or persecution and strain towns already managing limited housing and services.
Policy Shifts Raising the Stakes
The government, led by Prime Minister Dick Schoof, has declared an “asylum crisis”, enabling emergency steps that bypass normal parliamentary procedures. On September 13, 2025, the cabinet presented a new asylum and migration programme that builds on a coalition agreement first unveiled in May 2024.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the proposals mark the strictest direction in recent Dutch history, moving from reception as the default toward stronger deterrence and faster removal for those denied protection.
Key proposed measures
- Stricter naturalisation rules: Dutch language requirement raised to B1; naturalisation waiting period extended to 10 years; renunciation of prior citizenship required where possible.
- Limits on family reunification: Recognised refugees could sponsor family only after holding status for 2 years, with adequate housing and stable income; additional limits for adult children.
- Temporary moratorium on new asylum applications: Suspension of lodging new claims, reduction of reception places, and option of forced removals for people without a right to remain.
- End of automatic permanent residence after 5 years: People with protection may be required to return if their country of origin is later deemed safe.
- Withdrawal of the Dispersal Act (Spreidingswet): Repeal of the law intended to spread reception pressure across municipalities.
- New credibility assessment: Since July 2024, applicants must provide objective, original evidence or meet strict criteria under Article 4(5) of the EU Qualification Directive.
- Longer decision times: Legal time limit for asylum decisions rose from 6 to 15 months in December 2023, amid a backlog exceeding 50,000 open cases as of February 2025.
The Dutch Immigration and Naturalisation Service (IND) has published regular updates on procedural changes and timelines, including reception pressure, decision deadlines, and appeals routes. Readers can follow official developments through the IND’s English-language page on recent policy updates: Dutch Immigration and Naturalisation Service (IND) – asylum and family reunification updates. Officials argue these tools are needed to manage arrivals and give the system breathing room.
Facts and figures driving the debate
- 32,175 first asylum applications in 2024 (down from 38,377 in 2023).
- Recognition rate at first instance: 75.3% overall — 24.9% refugee status, 46.8% subsidiary protection, 3.7% humanitarian protection.
- Backlog: More than 50,000 asylum cases pending as of early 2025.
- Detentions: 4,400 applicants detained in 2024 amid staff shortages in detention centers.
Daily Impact on Applicants and Towns
Policy debates have moved from committee rooms into the streets where shelter, schools, and local budgets are strained. The proposed measures could change family life, legal steps, and long-term futures for asylum seekers:
- Longer waits: Decision timelines extended to 15 months mean more time in reception, greater uncertainty, and delayed integration steps like language classes.
- Evidence hurdles: Tighter credibility rules (since July 2024) require original, objective proof or highly consistent testimony — a challenge for trauma survivors who lack documents.
- Family reunification delays: Recognised refugees may need to wait 2 years before sponsoring spouses and children; stricter limits for adult children could prolong separations.
- Path to permanence: Ending automatic permanent residence after five years creates uncertainty for those who have started work, schooling, or community ties.
- Risk of removal: A moratorium on new claims and stronger removal aims could increase enforced departures, especially for those who exhaust legal remedies.
Municipal consequences:
- Repeal of the Dispersal Act may concentrate pressure in fewer municipalities.
- Towns hosting large reception sites report crowded classrooms, overstretched healthcare, and limits in social housing.
- Sudden shifts in reception policy or funding could leave vulnerable people without shelter and expose cities to legal claims over basic care.
Human rights advocates say the “asylum crisis” label is a political tool to sidestep EU and international safeguards. Government officials counter that emergency steps are necessary to manage arrivals, reduce backlogs, and prevent services from breaking down. The Council of State and the upper house are expected to scrutinize the package after the summer recess; court challenges are likely if parliament passes the most far-reaching parts. Analysts expect continued debate over an EU opt-out bid, though few predict it will succeed.
Looking Ahead: Risks and Scenarios
- The backlog could stretch into 2026, with stricter rules making each case more complex.
- If recognition rates remain high while decisions slow, reception centers will stay full, keeping pressure on housing markets for both locals and newcomers.
- Repeal of dispersal may lead to fewer municipalities volunteering beds, more temporary sites (tents), longer transfers, and rising tensions spilling into streets.
As night fell over The Hague after Saturday’s clashes, cleanup crews washed glass from sidewalks and firefighters checked damaged property. The scene of a police car torched in the heart of government will likely remain a potent image of this moment in Dutch migration politics.
Whether the next chapter is written in committee rooms or on protest lines may depend on leaders’ ability to lower temperatures, trim backlogs, and give towns the tools they need to keep people safe, housed, and heard.
The coming weeks will test whether focus turns to workable compromises — or whether further street unrest follows.
This Article in a Nutshell
A large anti-asylum protest in The Hague on September 20, 2025, turned violent when masked agitators threw projectiles, attacked a political office and set a police car on fire. Police used tear gas and water cannons and made arrests. The unrest amplifies debate over a proposed stringent asylum and migration package that includes raising naturalisation language requirements to B1, extending the naturalisation waiting period to 10 years, restricting family reunification, suspending new asylum claims, ending automatic permanent residence after five years, and tougher credibility evidence rules. The system faces a backlog of more than 50,000 cases and longer decision times of up to 15 months. Municipalities, the VNG and refugee groups warn that these measures could increase local tensions, strain services, and provoke legal challenges. Officials say emergency steps are needed to manage arrivals and reduce backlogs. The political and legal battle will continue in parliament and courts, with potential consequences for social cohesion and municipal capacity.