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NETHERLANDS

Pirate Bay to seek Dutch retrial

The operators of file-sharing site The Pirate Bay are to launch a legal challenge to a Dutch court order temporarily banning the site's activities.

“We will file a summons by August 25th” before the district court in Amsterdam, lawyer Ernst Louwers, acting for The Pirate Bay founders Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg and Peter Sunde, told AFP.

The men wanted a new trial so that they could present their side of the story, he explained.

On July 30th, the court granted an urgent application brought by copyright lobby group Stichting Brein for an interdict against the site. The site’s owners had not been present for the hearing.

A judge ordered them to “cease infringing the copyright of the members” of Stichting Brein — a trade association representing the Dutch recording industry.

The interdict was to remain valid for two months, by which time Stichting Brein must have filed an application for a permanent ruling, or it will lapse.

The judge ordered Neij, Warg and Sunde to immediately make their website inaccessible to users in the Netherlands. Failure to do so would be punishable to the tune of €30,000 ($42,000) per day, up to €3 million.

Founded in 2003, The Pirate Bay makes it possible to skirt copyright fees and share music, film and computer game files for free using bit torrent technology, or peer-to-peer links offered on the site.

None of the material can be found on the server of The Pirate Bay, which claims to have more than 20 million users worldwide.

Stichting Brein said on Monday it would not oppose The Pirate Bay’s bid for a new trial, but said it had “no doubt” the judgment would be maintained.

The body agreed to the suspension of the €30,000-a-day fine for the month of August, until The Pirate Bay reopens the case.

A Swedish court in April found Neij, Warg and Sunde guilty with a fourth colleague, Carl Lundström, for promoting copyright infringement by running the site and sentenced them to a year in prison.

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TERRORISM

Swede among ‘terror’ suspects arrested in the Netherlands

Dutch police have arrested four men including a Swedish citizen suspected of being involved in terror-related activities, prosecutors said on Tuesday.

Swede among 'terror' suspects arrested in the Netherlands
Stock image/Depositphotos

“Rotterdam police detained four men early on Sunday evening on suspicion of being involved in terrorism,” the public prosecution's office said in a statement.

One of the men, aged 29, arrived on a flight from Stockholm earlier on Sunday while the other three aged 21, 23 and 30 come from the cities of Vlaardingen, Delft and Gouda in southwest Netherlands.

Dutch police raided three homes in the three cities and seized data but found no weapons or explosives, the statement said.

Although “there is no concrete information to indicate a terror attack, police and the public prosecution's office are not taking any chances,” prosecutors said without giving further information.

The suspects remain in custody pending a court appearance.

A Dutch citizen was sentenced to four years in November for preparing a terror attack following his arrest in Rotterdam last year, when police discovered an assault rifle and a large amount of fireworks.

In another scare, Dutch military police shot and wounded a man armed with a knife at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport earlier this month, but authorities said the incident was not terror-related.

The Netherlands has so far been spared from the slew of terror attacks to have rocked its closest European neighbours in recent years.