-
- Mainstream Media Poodles Reports
Article from:
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,1896750,00.html
Germany | 09.02.2006
Trial Highlights Limits of Free Speech in Germany
On Thursday, Ernst Zündel,
a Holocaust denier, faces a German court on charges of inciting racial
hatred and defaming the dead. The case shows that while Germany guarantees
freedom of expression, there are limits.
According
to prosecutors, Ernst Zündel is one of the "most active"
Holocaust deniers today. He began distributing Nazi and neo-Nazi
propaganda in the 1970s and has written several books praising Adolf
Hitler and the Nazi regime. Since 1995, he has been associated with a Web
site that carries his name and is one of biggest online repositories of
Holocaust-denial propaganda.
But Zündel,
who was born in Germany's Black Forest region, was only able to engage in
such activities because he was living outside of his native county, in
Canada and the United States.
Although
freedom of the press and of expression is written into German law, the
country is generally more wary of free speech than the US, where Zündel's
dissemination of racist literature and refutation of the Holocaust --
while distasteful to most -- was perfectly legal.
In
Germany, however, it was not. Zündel was deported to his native country
in March 2005 after a long legal battle with the Canadian government. He
found himself immediately under arrest and up against the German justice
system. If the 66-year-old is found guilty by a court in Mannheim of
incitement to racial hatred, libel and defamation of the memory of the
dead, he faces up to five years in prison.
Constitutional
rights and constraints
Article
5 of Germany's constitution, or Basic Law, enshrines the right of freedom
of speech and of the press.
"Everyone
has the right to freely express and disseminate their opinions orally, in
writing or visually and to obtain information from generally accessible
sources without hindrance," states paragraph one of the law.
"Freedom of the press and freedom of reporting through audiovisual
media shall be guaranteed. There shall be no censorship."
But the
next paragraph puts certain limits on that freedom, which were deemed
necessary when the Basic Law was proclaimed in 1949, just four years after
the end of World War II and the downfall of the Nazi dictatorship.
"These
rights are subject to limitations embodied in the provisions of general
legislation, statutory provisions for the protection of young persons and
the citizen's right to personal respect," reads the second paragraph.
German
law therefore constrains press freedom, said Udo Branahl, a professor of
media law at the University of Dortmund.
"The
penal law code says Holocaust denial is a punishable offense," he said.
"That ban limits press freedom and overrides the right to free
expression in the mass media."
Germany
is not the only European country to make Holocaust denial a crime. France,
Italy and Austria have similar statutes on the books.
Criminal
abroad, tried in Germany
So
while in the US and Canada, Zündel could freely present his
"evidence" that the gas chambers and crematoria of the Third Reich
did not exist, in Germany, he was committing a crime that he would be tried
for, even though it was not committed on German soil.
The
country's Federal Constitutional Court confirmed in 1994 that Holocaust
revisionism is not protected speech.
"In
weighing the importance of free speech against that of individual rights,
courts must consider on the one hand the severity of the offense caused by
Holocaust denial to the Jewish population in light of the suffering
inflicted upon it by Germany," the court wrote at the time.
"This court has consistently protected the personal honor of those
defamed above the right of others to make patently false statements."
In
the United States, where a broader definition of the freedom of expression
has traditionally been considered one of the country's most foundations,
this limitation on expression is often met with disapproval.
"I
disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death you're right to
say it," goes a citation from Voltaire that's often quoted.
"I've
spoken with a lot of Americans, and they don't understand us," said
Wolfgang Wippermann, a professor at the Freie University in Berlin who
studies Nazism and right-wing extremism. "I tell them, 'In your
country, drug dealers also go to prison; these Holocaust deniers are like
drug dealers, but dealing in mental poison'."
Kyle James
|