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EU declares trivialising genocide a crime

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  • EU declares trivialising genocide a crime

    EU declares trivialising genocide a crime
    by David Charter, Luxembourg

    Weekend Australian
    April 21, 2007 Saturday
    NSW Country Edition


    CONDONING or "grossly trivialising" genocide will become a crime
    punishable by up to three years' prison across Europe after justice
    ministers agreed on a new law yesterday.

    But they failed to agree on a specific ban on denying the Holocaust.

    Germany used its presidency of the European Union to push through the
    first Europe-wide race hate laws, seen by Berlin as a historic
    obligation in the 50th anniversary year of the union, created to
    preserve peace and prosperity after World War II.

    Under pressure from nations worried about freedom of speech, led by
    Britain, Germany scaled back ambitions to replicate its strict laws
    of Holocaust denial and dropped plans to outlaw the display of Nazi
    symbols at an EU level. Holocaust denial was outlawed in Germany in
    1985 and Nazi insignia are forbidden.

    All 27 EU nations will be obliged to criminalise "publicly
    condoning, denying or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide, crimes
    against humanity and war crimes" but the test for prosecution was
    set deliberately high to secure agreement in Luxembourg. Cases will
    succeed only where "the conduct is carried out in a manner likely to
    incite violence or hatred".

    German Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries hailed the decision as "an
    important political signal" following failures in 2003 and 2005 to
    reach such a deal.

    The definition of genocide will be that set at the Nuremberg trials
    and by the International Criminal Court, meaning it will include Nazi
    crimes and those in Rwanda and Yugoslavia but not the Armenian
    genocide -- a definition disputed by Turkey.

    Poland, Slovenia and the Baltic states lobbied hard for -- but failed
    to win -- the inclusion of a crime of denying, condoning or
    trivialising atrocities committed in the name of Joseph Stalin.

    But they secured a pledge that the commission would prepare a green
    paper on 20th-century genocidal crimes and carry out a review within
    two years on whether denying these should come under the race hate
    law.

    Britain pushed successfully to ensure religious attacks would be
    covered only if they were of a racist or xenophobic nature, so that
    criticism of Islam or other faiths would not automatically fall under
    the new measures.
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