Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

EU Set To Criminalize Racial Hatred

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • EU Set To Criminalize Racial Hatred

    EU SET TO CRIMINALISE RACIAL HATRED

    UK Express, UK
    April 19 2007

    European governments are on the brink of agreeing a deal on EU-wide
    laws to criminalise racial hatred.

    Proposals on the table after six years of fraught negotiations
    call for jail terms of up to three years for "intentional conduct"
    inciting violence or hatred against a person's "race, colour, religion,
    descent or national or ethnic origin."

    The same would apply to "publicly condoning, denying or grossly
    trivialising crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war
    crimes... when the conduct is carried out in a manner likely to
    incite to violence or hatred against such a group or a member of such
    a group."

    The proposals do not single out Holocaust denial, despite pressure
    from Germany, where it is already a crime.

    And UK government officials insist the EU provisions would mean no
    changes because domestic law, including the 2006 Religious and Racial
    Hatred Act, is already tougher.

    Key to the latest EU plans is the test of incitement - avoiding
    criminalising "academic" debate about the Holocaust or genocide unless
    the intentional result is to stir up hatred.

    Subject to appeasing the Poles and Baltic states, pressing for a
    specific inclusion of "Stalinist" crimes in the document, a deal
    should be agreed at talks between EU justice ministers in Luxembourg.

    If approved, the new rules will introduce mandatory jail terms in
    27 countries for intentional public incitement including for "public
    dissemination or distribution of tracts, pictures or other material"
    deemed to incite racial hatred.

    But officials insist the wording has been painstakingly designed to
    avoid criminalising films or plays about the Holocaust - and Turkey
    would not find itself in the dock because of the government's official
    position denying that the killing of Armenians by Ottoman troops
    nearly 100 years ago was "genocide".

    A senior EU source said: "These plans leave flexibility for national
    authorities to be tougher, and they avoid a blanket offence of
    "denial": the test will be an intention to incite hatred by abusive
    or insulting behaviour."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X