
by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief
AMSTERDAM (Worthy News) – Two teenage asylum seekers were shot and killed on New Year’s Day in a park of the Dutch capital’s Nieuw-West (New West) district, raising concerns about tensions within migrant communities and public safety in Amsterdam and across the Netherlands, Dutch police said Friday.
The shooting occurred around 11:45 p.m. local time on a bridge in Amsterdam’s Piet Wiedijkpark, leaving a 16-year-old boy staying in an asylum seekers’ centre in Delft and an 18-year-old resident of an Amsterdam asylum centre dead despite resuscitation attempts, according to witnesses and investigators.
Emergency services responded quickly, but the victims were reportedly pronounced dead at the scene.
Police said the suspect or suspects fled before officers arrived. The area was sealed off overnight as forensic teams gathered evidence and detectives launched a full investigation. No arrests ware made late Friday.
ASYLUM SEEKERS AMONG VICTIMS
Police confirmed that both victims were living in asylum accommodation.
Local media reported investigators are examining whether the killings are linked to a broader conflict between groups of youths—including claims involving youths from Syria and Spanish-speaking youths with South American backgrounds. Police said they cannot yet comment on those reports.
A witness told Dutch public broadcaster NOS he immediately knew it was not fireworks. “It was clearly gunfire,” the unidentified man said, adding he heard “six or seven shots” while walking his dog.
The witness said he called emergency services and stayed with one victim lying on the bridge “covered in blood,” later alerting officers to a second wounded person nearby.
RESIDENTS NOT SURPRISED
Residents said they were saddened “but not surprised” citing frequent complaints about the park, including groups of youths congregating spreading rubbish, and “harassment” of elderly people.
“It’s getting worse everywhere,” one person said, while another added, “This is no longer normal.”
Police urged anyone with information or video footage to come forward.
The killings come amid an ongoing national debate over massive migration, with many arriving from Islamic nations, asylum housing, and integration. Authorities say they seek to balance community safety concerns with moral and European obligations to help people in need.
At least hundreds of thousands of people immigrated to the Netherlands since 2023, a year when 336,000 migrants came including for work, family, study, and asylum, “a net migration gain of around +137,000” as many others also left, according to the Statistics Netherlands agency.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
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