Astrid Holleeder has been leasing in fear for ten years on behalf of her brother Willem, while Twan Huys once hoists the top criminal on the shield. And now they sit together at RTL Tonight. “Annoying.”
It must undoubtedly be an uncomfortable situation: Astrid Holleeder and Twan Huys as fixed faces in the same talk show, while their past sands with each other. She lived in hiding for years out of fear of her brother, he was reviled because he once almost glorified the same Willem Holleeder in College Tour.
“It’s remarkable”
Tina Nijkamp, the TV authority of our country, gets a question about it in her podcast. “Is it not a bit strange that Twan Huys is in a studio every week with Astrid Holleeder? After all: he then received Willem Holleeder with all the Eaards in College Tour,” said this listener of Tina’s TV UPDATE.
Tina then says: “Yes, that is a remarkable question. I think they have already talked about it in advance. To be honest, I also think that Twan Huys might regret that College Tour. In any case, it is not something he is very proud of, so I don’t think it’s a very big problem. Of course it is remarkable.”
“Does your brother know?”
Astrid has been bombed into one of the stars of RTL Tonight. She has unveiled her face to the general public and is now suddenly a television star. “Do you think your brother knows about your step now?” Ahmed Aboutaleb asks her in that talk show.
She then: “I think so, yes. They just have television, isn’t it?”
Ahmed: “He is not entirely in isolation? He just has access to media?”
Willem looks
Astrid thinks Ahmed does not have a good picture of the prison system. “No dude, that’s not a complete isolation at all. That is the idea about the EBI, but we knew it wasn’t. We were told:” He is isolated in a department completely separate, “but it soon turned out to be no longer the case. Now he is just in a department with others.”
Host Renze Klamer: “Do you think he’s watching tonight?”
Astrid: “I think so.”
Don’t talk bad
Renze wonders if that scares Astrid. “What kind of feeling does that give you?”
Astrid: “I don’t want to talk about him badly, do you understand? That whole witnesses were a torment, because you have to say nasty things about someone all the time. It remains my brother. I know: he is bad. I have to say it that way. He does and did bad things, but of course I know him as a child.”
Then she bursts out in tears: “Do a different question.”

