Dutch Queen Beatrix to unveil monument to spectators killed in last year’s Queen’s Day attack

By Mike Corder, AP
Thursday, April 29, 2010

Dutch queen unveils monument to attack victims

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Dutch Queen Beatrix was unveiling a monument Thursday to spectators killed when a depressed loner tried to slam his car into a bus carrying the royal family during last year’s national day celebrations.

Security authorities stepped up precautions for the first “Queen’s Day” festivities since Karst Tates plowed through a crowd and into a stone monument in Apeldoorn, killing himself and seven bystanders.

Beatrix and several members of her family looked on in horror from their open-topped bus, which was Tates’ target. Footage of the scene, broadcast repeatedly over the next few days, stunned the nation.

The Apeldoorn attack “taught us we had to tighten things up” for Friday’s celebration, said Jan Dalebout, the police chief responsible for Queen’s Day security.

The monument being unveiled Thursday is a sculpture of a box full of balloons symbolizing vulnerability, festivities and mourning.

Police surrounded it with concrete barriers, installed extra security cameras and sealed mailboxes in nearby streets — a significant increase in security compared with last year, when Tates was able to speed through metal barriers.

His small black Suzuki car sent spectators flying like rag dolls before it missed the royal bus by meters and crashed into a needle-shaped stone monument.

Security will be tight Friday for the queen’s visit to the southern province of Zeeland. Police have been given the power to pat down at random any member of the public and residents near the queen’s parade routes must remove garbage bins and other containers.

“We are responsible for the security of 45,000 people, so we have to be absolutely certain, and we’ve done that,” said Koos Schouwenaar, mayor of Middelburg, one of two towns Beatrix is scheduled to visit.

“On the other hand, it has to be a party, so we have to avoid measures that will spoil the party,” he added when announcing security earlier this year.

Vice Prime Minister Andre Rouvoet called Queen’s Day 2009 “a black page in our history,” but said he hoped this year’s events would be “a happy day as we are used to.”

In recent years, the Queen’s Day holiday has heightened speculation that the 72-year-old monarch could announce her retirement. But even though Friday marks the 30th year of Beatrix’s reign, there has been little talk about her abdication in favor of her eldest son, Crown Prince Willem-Alexander.

While Beatrix remains popular among her 16 million subjects, Willem-Alexander’s popularity has dipped this year amid criticism of his plan to build a holiday home on a remote Mozambique peninsula.

He was forced to abandon the project after media reports suggested developers were not keeping promises to help residents.

An investigation into last year’s attack reported that the 38-year-old Tates confessed as he lay slumped and bleeding in his car that he intended to hit the royal family. He went into a coma shortly afterward and died of his injuries the following day.

Among his final words, Tates called Willem-Alexander a “fascist … a racist,” according to Tom Driessen of the national investigation bureau, which carried out the probe.

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