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Taken from BBC.co.uk/news Monday, 6 May, 2002,
The
death of Pim Fortuyn comes just nine days before Dutch national elections
in which polls had predicted he would win enough seats to lead one of
the country's largest parties. Once written off by Dutch politicians and
media alike, Fortuyn recently burst on to the political scene with a heady
cocktail of policies which was finding favour right across the Netherlands.
The 54-year-old sociology professor was a flamboyant character
who combined custom-made Italian suits and a flashy lifestyle with hard-hitting
anti-immigrant views. Professor Pim, as he liked to be called, shocked
the Dutch establishment in February with a call for the repeal of the
first article of the constitution which forbids discrimination. As a result
he was sacked as leader of his own party, Livable Netherlands.
Image boost
But the controversy, if anything, enhanced Fortuyn's reputation,
and that of his new party, Lijst Pim Fortuyn. He went on to win around
one-third of the votes after standing as a candidate in municipal elections
in Rotterdam, the country's second largest city. Polls suggested that
in national elections due in May Fortuyn and his party were set to pick
up enough seats in the country's 150-seat parliament to become a significant
political force in their own right.
Some polls predicted that they would garner as many as 26 seats - or 17%
of the parliament. The shaven-headed former academic and columnist was
openly gay, distinguishing him from the bulk of Europe's far-right, traditionalist
politicians. Fortuyn's Rotterdam residence, christened "Casa di Pietro,"
was styled on an Italian villa and filled with precious artefacts which
he loved to show off. He lived there with his two small
dogs called Kenneth and Carla, served by a butler, and boasted a chauffeur-driven
car.
Anti-Islamic attacks
He
used his sexuality as fuel for his fire against Islam, which - like many
other religions - does not accept homosexuality. He slammed Islam as a
"backward culture" - a view which he expounded at length in
a book called Against The Islamisation Of Our Culture. Born in 1948 to
a conservative Catholic family in a small town in the north-west of the
country, Fortuyn went to Amsterdam in the 1970s to study sociology and
later became a professor at the University of Groningen.
Over the last 10 years he made his name as a columnist and commentator,
producing a number of articles and books on society and politics. Fortuyn's
anti-Muslim views, calls for an end to all immigration and pledges to
come down hard on crime struck a chord with voters despite the country's
celebrated reputation for liberalism and religious tolerance.The Netherlands
was the first country to legalise gay marriages, regulate prostitution,
approve and control euthanasia, and tolerate the over-the-counter sale
of marijuana.
Youth appeal
Fortuyn
wanted to reduce significantly the number of immigrants and asylum-seekers
who arrive in the Netherlands each year, from a current 40,000 people
to just 10,000 "in no time at all". "This
is a full country," he said. "I think 16 million Dutchmen are
about enough." He had a particularly strong appeal amongst
the young.
Nearly one half of 18-30 year-olds recently polled want
to see zero Muslim immigration, and said they would be voting for Fortuyn
in May's ballots. Even those who did not intend to vote for him agreed
the maverick leader had a certain attraction.
Analysts said Fortuyn found support among voters who would
traditionally veer to the far-right, but also among those fed up with
the existing political landscape and centre-left government.
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