A 22-year-old asylum seeker has been arrested in connection with the killing of 17 year-old Lisa, who was fatally stabbed in Amsterdam while trying to call police to report that she was being followed.
Lisa was cycling home to Abcoude around 3:30 a.m. after a night out with friends when she placed a distress call to the emergency number. Before the call connected, she was attacked. Her body, bearing multiple stab wounds to the neck and torso, was later discovered in a ditch near her former secondary school.
Police confirmed that the suspect had been arrested just days earlier in two separate cases: an alleged rape on August 15 in Weesperzijde, and another assault on August 10. Dutch media reported he had been living at an asylum reception center in Amsterdam run by the Central Agency for the Reception of Asylum Seekers.
Lisa’s death has shocked the country. Residents have covered the crime scene with flowers and handwritten notes, while Ajax fans held a moment of silence at the Johan Cruijff Arena, displaying banners in her memory.
Her grieving family said in a statement: “Our hearts are broken. We hope we can mourn Lisa’s loss together in peace and privacy. We are immensely supported by the love and sympathy from family, friends, and fellow villagers, and we want to express our gratitude for this.”
The case has reignited debate on women’s safety and asylum policy. Dutch actress and author Nienke Gravemade shared a poem reflecting on Lisa’s final moments, focusing on the red handbag she carried on her bicycle: “The red bag. I keep thinking about that red bag. How it dangled from her handlebars as she drove through the night. A night that belonged to her too. I claim the night. I claim the streets. I demand that the fear be lifted.”
Authorities are appealing for witnesses captured on CCTV near the scene including a scooter rider, a Biro microcar, and the occupants of a delivery van to come forward. Police said: “What happened between the victim’s departure from Leidseplein and the discovery of her body is still unclear. We are urgently seeking information about her last cycling route.”
Public anger has spilled into the streets. Over 500 people marched in Rotterdam on Sunday against femicide, carrying signs that read: “She had dreams, no grave needed” and “Not all men, but always men.”
The killing comes as the Netherlands grapples with political turmoil over asylum policy. Tensions reached a breaking point in June when the Dutch government collapsed after far-right leader Geert Wilders withdrew his party from the ruling coalition.
