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Aug 11, 2025  |  
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Daniel Greenfield


NextImg:Muslim Sets Off 700 Explosions in the Netherlands This Year

Explosions keep going off in the Netherlands. Why? Who knows? Who’s behind it? Let’s not talk about that!

The New York Times devotes an entire article to the subject of bombs going off in the Netherlands while bringing slightly less clarity to the matter than trying to read a Chinese crossword puzzle through a microscope after soaking it in vinegar.

A Small European Nation Has a Big Explosions Problem – New York Times

Much like ‘gun violence’, the focus here is on the means rather than the perpetrators. Guns shoot themselves in Detroit and Chicago. Explosions go off in the Netherlands. What’s behind this phenomenon? Please don’t ask the Times.

About three times a night, in quiet and orderly streets across the Netherlands, residents are startled awake by a loud blast. Small explosions have become disturbingly familiar in a country better known for tulips and bicycles than violence. For Dutch people who pride themselves on levelheadedness, the blasts, usually caused by illegal fireworks with the strength of a grenade, have created a sense of unease.

Why do the usually levelheaded Dutch have to cope with explosions three times a night? What changes might have happened to cause this?

The explosions have shaken communities across the Netherlands: In the first half of this year, the authorities recorded nearly 700 such bombings. The explosions cause fear, damage homes and livelihoods, and have occasionally led to deaths or injuries.

700 is a whole lot. Surely there are perpetrators.

For years, the blasts had been linked to organized crime and drug traffickers using hand grenades to settle scores.

The Netherlands had crime for years. The perps generally didn’t use hand grenades and certainly not on such a massive scale.

In December, six people died after a large blast caused a fire and the partial collapse of a three-story block of apartments in The Hague, a city perhaps best known as the seat of the International Criminal Court. Four people have been arrested and are facing charges, including one who the authorities believe ordered the bombing to target a bridal shop belonging to his ex-girlfriend. (She was out of town at the time.)

That tells us everything except who the perpetrators actually are. The New York Times won’t do it, so I’ll have to.

Moshtag Barekzai, Ilyas and Mourad are the names of the suspect. Typical Dutch folks.

The bombings in the Netherlands are mostly the work of Moroccan Muslim gangs like the infamous Mocro Mafia which lately began moving into Germany.

Fears have been growing of potential mafia wars between Dutch and German crime networks in western Germany after police connected a number of recent explosions in Cologne to organized crime groups.

An explosion in a cafe on the ground floor of an apartment block in the early hours of Wednesday, September 25, has led German police investigate where there are links among a recent spate of fires and explosions in the city. According to public broadcaster WDR, witnesses saw two people running away as the cafe burned. Two residents of the block were treated for smoke poisoning, though most were reportedly brought to safety.

Dutch and German?

All these crimes are thought to have been carried out by the so-called “Mocro mafia” — an umbrella term adopted by the media in both the Netherlands and Germany for several organized crime groups that originally arose from the Dutch Moroccan community in the 1990s.

The media and politicians are busy pretending that these bombings are Dutch, German and even Italian. Anything but Muslim.

The mayors of Amsterdam and Rotterdam are warning of a “culture of crime and violence that is gradually acquiring Italian traits”, with record amounts of intercepted drugs at the port of Rotterdam, extreme violence that often kills the wrong target, and €15bn to €30bn a year laundered into property, cannabis “coffee shops”, tourism and bars.

The culture of crime and violence isn’t taking on Italian characteristics, it’s taking on Middle Eastern ones. But no one dares to say it. European media at least tries to cover it up while the New York Times manages to run a whole article without once explaining to its readers why there are explosions going off. As far as Times readers are concerned, the Dutch have suddenly taken to blowing each other up.