
The Netherlands and Morocco will now have a legal framework to transfer criminal suspects between the two countries.
ℹ️ خواندن با صدای مرورگر · صدای استودیویی هوش مصنوعی بهزودی
Dutch Members of Parliament have backed a bilateral treaty with Morocco that makes it easier to deport people suspected of crimes, allowing suspects to be transferred between the two countries, DutchNews reported on Wednesday.
The vote in the Dutch parliament marks a significant step in judicial cooperation between the Netherlands and Morocco, two countries with longstanding demographic and diplomatic ties. The treaty establishes a formal legal channel for transferring criminal suspects across borders — a mechanism that had previously been absent between the two nations, leaving authorities with limited options when pursuing cross-border suspects.
The agreement is expected to strengthen law enforcement collaboration by providing a clear procedural framework that both governments can rely on when handling extradition and transfer requests. Such bilateral treaties are a common instrument in international criminal justice cooperation and bring the Netherlands and Morocco in line with arrangements the Netherlands holds with other partner countries.
The treaty now moves toward formal ratification before it can take legal effect.