PVV FIGHTS TO IGNORE THE RULING OF ANTI-SEMITIC COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION
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Earlier this week MEPs Wilders en Markuszower (both PVV) submitted a motion in Parliament to call on the Dutch government to ignore the ruling of the anti-Semitic Court of Justice of the European Union.
The Court of Justice of the European Union has decided that products from Judea and Samaria can no longer be labeled "made in Israel”.
The Jewish State did not occupy Judea and Samaria, but rather liberated it. Therefore products from those areas are indeed "made in Israel".
Geert Wilders is threatened with being beheaded
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Last year Geert Wilders filed a police report against Pakistani Islamic cleric Khadim Hussain Rizvi, because Rizvi issued a fatwa against him.
The leader of the Party for Freedom has now again filed a police report against the Islamic cleric.
In a video clip that was sent to Geert Wilders via Twitter, Rizvi is threatening to behead Wilders.
“Once our government is installed, we will behead you", is stated in the tweet sent on October 24.
Below the text was a video of Rizvi.
The police report was submitted inside the building of the House of Representatives on Wednesday.
Wilders says he feels seriously threatened by the recording.
Pakistani Migrant Male Gets 10 Years For Terror Plot to Kill Geert Wilders Over Mohammed Cartoons
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A Pakistani migrant male has been jailed for ten years in the Netherlands for his plot to launch a terror attack against Dutch firebrand Geert Wilders in revenge for his organising a ‘draw Mohammad’ free speech event.
The ten-year sentence for the Pakistani male — identified in the trial only as ‘Junaid I.’ due to Dutch privacy laws — is significantly higher than the six years requested by the public prosecutor, the judges in the case noting a longer period of incarceration was required because of the seriousness of the crime.
The court had previously heard how Junaid had repeatedly said he wanted to kill Geert Wilders, whose Party for Freedom is the second largest in the Netherlands, that he beleived the death of Mr Wilders would be a good thing, and that the attention he was gaining from the trial was improving his public standing back home in Pakistan. For these reasons and because he believed Junaid still presented a terrorism risk, the judges in the case said a longer sentence was in order.