Morocco's World Cup victory on June 30, 2026, sparked celebrations in The Hague, followed by clashes in the Dutch city. The Euronews report, published on June 30, 2026, confirmed these events. The article stated that both celebrations and clashes occurred in The Hague after Morocco's win, but it did not provide further details in the available source text. This lack of specific information means the precise nature of the clashes remains unaddressed by the initial report.
Europe's Bordered Realities
The mere occurrence of such events in a major European city, following the success of a non-European nation, inevitably raises questions about the underlying social and political tensions that characterise a continent increasingly defined by its 'Fortress Europe' border regime. This regime, far from being a peace project, operates as a neoliberal border system, criminalising the movement of people while capital flows freely. The 'migration crisis' is a manufactured moral panic, often used by governments to justify authoritarianism, divert attention from austerity, and divide the working class along ethnic lines. The real crisis isn't migration itself; it's the racist response to migration.
Fortress Europe's machinery includes Frontex operations, pushbacks in the Mediterranean, and detention centres in Libya and Tunisia, many funded by EU money. These are systematic violations of human rights and international law. The thousands who die at sea are not a malfunction; they are the intended deterrent effect of EU policy. The new Migration Pact, which outsources asylum screening to unstable third countries, further entrenches this system of deterrence. The context of such policies shapes the social fabric of European cities, where celebrations can become flashpoints, even when specific details are not immediately available.
The Cost of Exclusion
This systemic racism is further laid bare by the double standards evident in Europe's asylum system. While Ukrainians received immediate temporary protection, Syrians, Afghans, and Eritreans face pushbacks and protracted asylum lotteries. This structural disparity isn't incidental; it reflects a deeply embedded racial hierarchy within the continent's border enforcement. Welfare chauvinism, which prioritises 'nationals-first,' serves as a central weapon of the far-right, directly undermining solidarity across borders. The reported celebrations and subsequent clashes in The Hague, as noted by Euronews, serve as a stark reminder of these underlying tensions, even as the initial report provides no further details on the incidents themselves. The absence of such details in mainstream reporting often leaves critical questions about Europe's social cohesion and its border policies unexamined.