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Norway bans motorcycle club Satudarah, branding it ‘criminal association’

The Dutch motorcycle club had two chapters in the country.

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Members of the Satudarah (One Blood) motorcycle gang leave after Dutch riot police blocked a group of 150 riders on the A2 motorway at the entrance to Amsterdam in 2011

Norway’s highest court has branded the Norwegian arm of Dutch motorcycle club Satudarah a criminal association and banned the group, saying it was necessary to prevent serious crime.

The Supreme Court said participants in the club “repeatedly committed serious offences against people’s lives, health and freedom”, and that their actions were “apt to cause fear in the population”.

The court added that although the Satudarah MC describes itself as a motorcycle club and is open to ethnic minorities, participants did not need to have a motorcycle to join.

“Nor does the club aim to promote multi-ethnic interests,” it wrote.

Satudarah translates as “one blood” from Indonesian Malay.

There are two Satudarah chapters in Norway. The Supreme Court also said that it describes itself as a “so-called 1% club – a term normally used for motorcycle clubs that live on the side of society’s laws and rules”.

Satudarah appeared in Norway in 2014, according to broadcaster NRK. In 2023, police asked courts to ban Satudarah because of its criminal activities.

In 2015, Germany banned the club, which originated in the Netherlands but has chapters in more than half a dozen countries in Europe and Asia.

The Netherlands eventually banned it. In neighbouring Denmark, the local chapter dissolved itself in May 2023 and became Comanches MC.

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