-
French first lady comments spark feminist backlash
-
Mets slugger Alonso set for Orioles move: reports
-
Divided US Fed makes third straight rate cut on jobs risks
-
Anti-government protest draws tens of thousands in Bulgaria
-
Beyonce, Venus Williams, Nicole Kidman to co-chair 2026 Met Gala
-
Intel sees record EU fine reduced further
-
Burundi says M23 advance in DR Congo a 'middle finger' to the US
-
Czechs greenlight magic mushroom use from 2026
-
US plans to order foreign tourists to disclose social media histories
-
Celtic boss Nancy 'won't waste time' on criticism
-
What's at stake as Yemeni separatists gain ground?
-
Stocks mark time ahead of Fed decision
-
Hollywood meets the world in Sundance line-up
-
French far right sparks debate with proposal to reopen brothels
-
Not lovin' it: McDonald's pulls Dutch AI Christmas ad
-
Earliest evidence of humans making fire discovered in UK
-
Evenepoel to share Red Bull lead with Lipowitz at Tour de France
-
Austrian court rejects Ukraine tycoon's US extradition
-
Instagram users given new algorithm controls
-
M23's advance in DR Congo prompts uncertainty, border closure
-
'Downward spiral': French mother blames social media for teen's suicide
-
US Fed expected to make third straight rate cut despite divisions
-
Daughter of Venezuela's Machado picks up Nobel peace prize in her absence
-
NFL to play regular season games in Munich in 2026 and 2028
-
Tens of thousands petition against Croatia Catholic men's public prayers
-
EU seeks better Spain-France energy links after blackout
-
French special forces helped Benin after attempted coup: military
-
Madeleine McCann's father says 'lucky' to survive media attention
-
Sabalenka says transgender women in WTA events 'not fair'
-
Gerrard urges Salah to stay at Liverpool and 'reverse away' from outburst
-
Greek govt in emergency meeting as farmers block central port
-
China consumer prices pick up pace but demand still slack
-
All Black wing Reece signs for French side Perpignan
-
Louvre thieves escaped with 30 seconds to spare, probe reveals
-
Stocks retreat ahead of Fed decision
-
Not just pizza: Italian cuisine makes UNESCO list
-
Spurs' Simons wants to 'build legacy' as he succeeds Son
-
Egypt switches off Liverpool after Salah fallout
-
Europe ministers meet on migration 'challenges' to rights convention
-
Real-life horror to TV drama: Feared Syria sites become sets for series
-
France's 'Battery Valley' makes use of Asian experts
-
Egypt teammates rally behind unsettled Salah before AFCON
-
Moo dunnit? Dog lets bull, horse into living room in Australia
-
Indian festival of lights Diwali joins UNESCO heritage list
-
New Zealand lose Tickner as West Indies all out for 205
-
China surplus pushing EU to take 'offensive' trade measures: business lobby
-
Japanese ivory trade attracts fresh global scrutiny
-
Tickner rushed to hospital as New Zealand bowl out West Indies for 205
-
Cambodia-Thailand border clashes send half a million into shelters
-
Cambodia pull out of SEA Games in Thailand over border conflict
Nazi past shakes Dutch royals as popularity wanes
Revelations that the Dutch king's grandfather was a card-carrying member of Adolf Hitler's Nazi party have stunned the Netherlands and its royal family, whose popularity was already in free-fall.
Prince Bernhard, husband of the former queen Juliana, had insisted until his death in 2004 that he had never signed up to the Nazi party.
"I can swear with my hand on the Bible: I have never been a Nazi," Bernhard told daily De Volkskrant in an interview just before his death aged 93.
He added he had "never paid a subscription fee and never had a membership card".
But the card, dated 1933 and confirmed to AFP to be genuine by the royal household, shattered these claims.
Historian Flip Maarschalkerweerd, former head of the royal archives, unearthed the membership card in the prince's personal files stored at his sumptuous Soestdijk Palace residence.
Born in 1911 in Jena, Bernhard von Biesterfeld was living in Berlin at the time he signed up to the Nazi party.
He married crown princess Juliana in 1937 after meeting her at the Berlin Olympic Games a year earlier and introduced her to the good life with fast cars, luxury holidays and designer clothes.
During the war, he headed the Dutch resistance from London, where the government and his mother-in-law, Queen Wilhelmina, resided in exile.
After Juliana became queen in 1948, he was made inspector general of the armed forces and conducted official and unofficial economic missions for the government.
Internationally, he was best known as founder of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in 1961. He was its president until 1977.
Two weeks after his death came revelations that he had fathered two illegitimate daughters and had a string of affairs, in the bombshell interview in De Volkskrant, where his part in a 1970s corruption scandal also came to light.
"I was surprised that Prince Bernhard kept the document and that it is still in the archives of the royal family," Rick Evers, a Dutch royal specialist, told AFP.
He said that the emergence of the card would not have happened without the consent of the current King Willem-Alexander.
"These are private archives, not national ones. He decides what to do with them."
The country's main Jewish group, CIDI, and a parliamentary party have demanded an enquiry into Bernhard's Nazi past but Prime Minister Mark Rutte has so far rejected the appeals.
The CIDI said the revelations "add another black page to a painful part of the recent history of the Netherlands".
For his part, Willem-Alexander told reporters: "I imagine that the news has a major impact and that it prompts a lot of emotion, especially in the Jewish community."
- 'Too little openness' -
For Jolijn Oliemans, a 41-year-old personal trainer passing by the splendid Noordeinde Palace, where Willem-Alexander has his office, the news came as a sort of betrayal.
"It is also that he has always denied it, which is difficult for many people and that there has been too little openness about it," she told AFP.
There were some calls on Dutch social media to abolish the royal family in the wake of the revelations and polls show their popularity is waning.
According to a September Ipsos survey, only 38 percent of the Dutch said they still had "real confidence" in the king.
This was down from nearly 80 percent in 2020.
More than a quarter of those surveyed called for the Netherlands to become a republic.
Several dozen protesters booed the royal family during the traditional Prince's Day celebrations in The Hague last month.
The family is still recovering from gaffes during Covid.
In October 2020, the king and queen flew to Greece for a holiday, as the country declared a partial Covid lockdown.
The couple returned a day later, following an outcry in the Netherlands after news of the trip became public.
Two months earlier, the king faced accusations that he was out of touch with the Covid struggles of the ordinary Dutch, when he was pictured on a Greek island without a facemask and not keeping social distancing.
E.Ramalho--PC