ASIATODAY.ID, AMSTERDAM — A flagship housing project once hailed as a progressive model for integrating refugees and local students has spiraled into scandal, exposing deep failures in public safety, oversight, and migration policy in one of Europe’s most liberal capitals.
The Stek Oost residential complex in Amsterdam, launched in 2018 to ease housing shortages while fostering social integration, is now linked to dozens of reports of sexual assault, rape, drug trafficking, and violent incidents, according to a damning investigation by Dutch investigative program Zembla, aired by broadcaster BNNVARA.
Twenty Reports, Years of Silence
Former residents have filed at least 20 reports of sexual assault and violence connected to the complex over the past 18 months alone, Zembla revealed. Stek Oost houses approximately 125 refugees with residence permits alongside 125 young Dutch tenants, an arrangement promoted as a symbol of inclusivity and coexistence.
Instead, multiple former residents describe an environment of fear, intimidation, and institutional neglect.
Rape Allegations Ignored
One former female resident told Zembla she was raped in 2019 by a Syrian refugee after he invited her to his room to watch a film. Although she reported the incident to police, the case was dropped due to what authorities described as insufficient evidence.
Another woman later warned the housing association Stadgenoot that the same individual posed a serious danger. Despite these warnings, local authorities said eviction was legally impossible.
Confidential documents obtained by Zembla show that both Stadgenoot and the Municipality of Amsterdam were aware as early as 2019 of multiple complaints involving the same resident—yet no decisive action was taken.
In 2024, a former Stek Oost tenant identified as Mohammed R.A. was eventually convicted on two counts of rape against female residents, raising serious questions about how long warning signs were ignored.
Drugs, Violence, and Alleged Gang Rape
Beyond sexual violence, residents and staff reported drug dealing, frequent fights, and even a suspected gang rape inside one of the studio apartments. Conditions deteriorated sharply in the summer of 2023 when housing staff were allegedly threatened, prompting Stadgenoot to formally request an end to the project.
“We were completely overwhelmed. We no longer wanted to be responsible for the safety of the complex,” said Marielle Foppen, a manager at Stadgenoot.
Despite these warnings, Amsterdam’s city authorities refused to terminate the project, citing contractual obligations that run until April 2028 and arguing that “people are still living there.”
A Broader Migration Reckoning
The Stek Oost scandal unfolds against the backdrop of record migration into the Netherlands. According to Statistics Netherlands, 316,000 migrants arrived in 2024, with the largest groups coming from Ukraine and Syria.
The case has reignited a heated national debate over integration policies, public safety, and the limits of tolerance, particularly when vulnerable residents—often young women—are left unprotected.
A Failed Social Experiment
What was once promoted as a model EU integration experiment has become, for many former residents, a symbol of institutional paralysis and moral failure. Critics argue Stek Oost illustrates how idealistic policy designs can collapse without strict enforcement, accountability, and victim-centered safeguards.
For survivors, the project was never a home—it was a warning ignored for years. (RT)
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