DutchNews.nl,
Saturday 20 July 2013
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Mountains
and coral reefs added
to Dutch landscape
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Rutte told
the NRC newspaper that officials looked at him shocked when he made the
surprise announcement during a meeting.
‘I said ‘if
you want to leave and a majority of your people support that position, then it
is possible. Give us a ring and we will arrange it’,’ the prime minister told
the paper.
Financial
support
Rutte said
he hoped the offer would prevent any further requests for financial support. ‘I
told them that if we ever talk again about the way the state is organised then
it will be if you want to leave the kingdom,’ the paper quoted him as saying.
The status
of the five of the six islands changed in 2010. Curacao and Sint Maarten are
now autonomous countries while Bonaire, Saba and Sint Eustatius have the status
of a local authority. Aruba has been independent since 1986.
Criticism
Rutte has
visited all six islands during his visit and has been outspoken in his
criticism of the way three – Curacao, Sint Maarten and Bonaire – are being
managed, the NRC said.
In
particular he has instigated a ‘far-reaching probe’ into the integrity of
government on Sint Maarten.
The
island’s justice minister was forced to resign earlier this year after it
emerged he ran several brothels. There has also been criticism of the €9,000 a
month paid to parliamentarians. Sint Maarten has just 39,000 residents.
Other
islands also have financial troubles. In September 2012 Curacao was placed
under a formal compliance order by the Dutch government when its budget showed
a shortfall of 153m Antillean guilders, of which nearly 100m guilders was
needed to cover debts from previous years.
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