Moroccan is new mayor of Rotterdam

ROTTERDAM - A Moroccan immigrant was installed yesterday as mayor of Rotterdam, the second largest city in the Netherlands, in…

ROTTERDAM - A Moroccan immigrant was installed yesterday as mayor of Rotterdam, the second largest city in the Netherlands, in a step seen as contributing towards the integration of minorities.

Ahmed Aboutaleb (47), a Muslim who was formerly junior minister for social affairs, vowed to ease tensions between the city's native Dutch and a growing immigrant population.

"Building trust means a hefty debate about the fundamentals of constitutional democracy: freedom of speech, freedom of religion, equal rights for men and woman, homosexual and heterosexual, and fighting discrimination," said Mr Aboutaleb, a former journalist.

Pim Fortuyn, an anti-Islam Dutch politician who was murdered in 2002, had his political power base in Rotterdam. Marco Pastors, a member of a party that adheres to Fortuyn's principles, said Mr Aboutaleb was the right man to continue Fortuyn's legacy.

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"The fact that someone with these features can become mayor, we see as an honour," he was quoted as saying by Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad. - (Reuters)