LOCAL HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEES, TILBURG 2022
Posted on by Cora Westerink ( 1965, Tilburg, The Netherlands)

Nederlandse versie in deze link
In 2021 I read a Dutch WRR report “Police function in a changing environment”.
I quote page 8: “The police protect life and limb, freedom and property of citizens. They not only ensure that citizens comply with the law by acting against offences and crimes, but they also protect everyone living or residing in the Netherlands and provide them with assistance. The police’s task is “to ensure, in subordination to the competent authority and in accordance with the applicable legal rules, the effective maintenance of the legal order and the provision of assistance to those who need it” (Article 3, Police Act, 2012).
In October 2020, I asked a Tilburg cop for city mediation due to growing ostracism from the Tilburg administration and an academic network. It started in 2014.
As of December 2020, I had been living with PTSD and a 3rd depression for over a year after a new tragedy in 2019.


A governmental ostracism process evolved from 2014, stored in my will and kept by the members of the Dutch National Committee of Human Rights and the members of Dutch Mind. From 2017 I have been living on social welfare, I have been experiencing class justice from 2021.
Tilburg’s administrative and collegiate behavior violates OECD guidelines on human capital and constitutional directives.
This blog is addressed to you, as a resident of a local community, village or a city. The introduction of Local Human Rights Commissions with authority to act can help curb local political and administrative network corruption by pushing for democratic, orderly use of social media. Local Human Rights Commissions can take over tasks from the police, such as mediation in conflicts between city residents, or protection of private life, guaranteeing the right to freedom from discrimination and providing the right to an independent listening ear with knowledge of dialogue and mediation. A Local Human Rights Commission can replace or insert the current local (in Tilburg network corrupted) Social Councils.

WHAT CAN A LOCAL HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION DO FOR YOU?
1. Takes over police tasks, such as mediation in conflicts between city residents, protection of your private life, or other ambiguities about your civil rights, noted in a publicly accessible convention on the website of your municipality.
2. a. Coordinates democratic, orderly use of social media by local governors, with the help of local advisory councils. b. Establish a cyber desk where resident can register cyber abuse for further investigation.
3. Supports your right to freedom from local discrimination.
4. Provides an independent listening ear through a network of professionals knowledgeable in dialogue and mediation techniques, if you get stuck communicating with public officials.
5. Sets up an advisory council from the local population for the vacancy of a new municipal secretary and mayor.
6. Takes a leading role in quarterly meetings of all local journalists and culture managers to discuss local political and journalistic ethics.
7. Gives a binding advice to the mayor concerning General Local Government Regulations.
8. Supervises Open Government Act and the BIBOB act.
Sincerely,
Link (auto)biografical sketch > C.W. (Cora) Westerink (1965, Sprang-Capelle)
Tilburg, 1990 – present
This Tilburg municipality letter (below, bilingual) was published and distributed from March until July 2021, by MOM / Quiet Director Ralf Embrechts. On the MOM website I read: “You can no longer participate in this trust-project.” A Tilburg example of Ostracism. Why? Can we have a eye-in-eye dialogue, Ralf Embrechts? No? Why not? Almost every day I see you walking around and cycling in Tilburg with your colleagues.

January 2022, I started my lobby to install the first Local Human Rights Committee in Tilburg, 12 months later, my male fellow citizen, who has a job, received this trophy below to honor his excluding Human Rights Tattoo project. Funny, Isn’t it?

Implementation Guide Human Rights Cities in the EU


