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EU Ministers Open Talks On Plans To Criminalize Racism, Xenophobia

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  • EU Ministers Open Talks On Plans To Criminalize Racism, Xenophobia

    EU MINISTERS OPEN TALKS ON PLANS TO CRIMINALIZE RACISM, XENOPHOBIA

    DPA
    19 April 07

    Luxembourg (dpa) - European Union justice ministers on Thursday opened
    talks on plans to establish common rules to criminalize racism and
    xenophobia for the first time in the 27-member bloc.

    German Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries said that the EU needed
    common minimum standards on combatting racism and xenophobia.

    Germany currently holds the rotating EU presidency.

    "We protect people because of their race or ethnic origin, and we
    don't tolerate their being discriminated against or that violence is
    used against them," Zypries told reporters in German when arriving
    for the meeting in Luxembourg.

    "We don't want incitement to violence or hatred," she added.

    EU Justice Commissioner Franco Frattini urged national governments
    to agree on ambitious rules, arguing that the fight against racism
    and xenophobia was a "basic pillar of the European democracy."

    Germany wants to use its term at the bloc's helm to harmonize EU-
    wide differences on combating racism and xenophobia.

    Under the text being debated, EU countries would set jail terms of
    at least one to three years for "publicly inciting to violence or
    hatred ... directed against a group of persons or a member of such
    a group defined by reference to race, colour, religion, descent or
    national or ethnic origin."

    Germany views a common EU law as a moral obligation, but countries
    like Britain, Ireland and the Scandinavian states resist unified
    legislation as a violation of civil liberties.

    EU diplomats have said that the planned rules only aimed to achieve a
    "minimum level of harmonization" as the differences in national legal
    systems had to be respected.

    The definition of what exactly constitutes incitement to violence or
    hatred will be left up to member states.

    EU lawmakers have criticized the German proposal as having "symbolic
    character" only.

    Under the plans, hate declarations referring to religion such as
    "Kill the Jews" or "Kill the Christians" would remain unpunished in
    EU countries where such statements are not criminalized, EU diplomats
    have said.

    They have also said that German plans to push through new rules which
    would make denying the Holocaust - the mass killing of Jews by Nazis
    and Nazi supporters - a crime in the EU, would not cover denying the
    massacre of Armenians in World War I.

    Turkey denies that the killing of up to 1 million Armenians constituted
    genocide, putting their deaths down to ethnic strife, disease and
    famine, and has prosecuted historians and journalists for calling
    it genocide.

    In addition, the proposed EU rules would not make denying crimes
    against humanity under the Stalin regime punishable, diplomats said.

    The Baltic states want the EU to make it a crime to deny the abuses
    of the Stalinist regime in the former Soviet Union.

    Under the planned rules, the denial of crimes of genocide, crimes
    against humanity and war crimes will be punishable in the EU if these
    crimes have been defined by international courts and if the statement
    incites to hatred or violence.

    Citing its "particular historic responsibility" due to its Nazi past,
    Germany has said it wants EU member states to adopt the proposed
    legislation before it ends its term at the EU helm at the end of June.

    Two years ago, Luxembourg tried to use its EU presidency to push
    through legislation to unify legal standards for Holocaust denial,
    but was blocked by Italy on the grounds that the proposed rules
    breached freedom of speech.

    Laws against denying the Holocaust already exist in Austria, Belgium,
    France, Germany and Spain.

    EU justice ministers are also expected to discuss new ways too make
    divorces of bi-national marriages in the bloc less expensive and
    cumbersome.
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