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Wikipedia

Legality of Holocaust denial

Between 1941 and 1945, Nazi Germany perpetrated the Holocaust: a large-scale genocidal campaign in which approximately six million European Jews were systematically murdered throughout German-occupied Europe. Since World War II, several countries have criminalised Holocaust denial—the assertion by antisemites that the genocide was a myth, fabrication or exaggeration. Currently, 17 European countries,[a] along with Israel and Canada, have laws in place that cover Holocaust denial as a punishable offence. Many countries also have broader laws that criminalise genocide denial, including that of the Holocaust. Among the countries that have banned Holocaust denial, Russia, Austria, Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania have also banned Nazi symbols. Any expression of genocide justification is also a criminal offence in several countries, as is any attempt to portray Nazism in a positive light.

Countries that, as of 2023, have legislation in place criminalising Holocaust denial are highlighted in red

Legislation against Holocaust denial has been proposed in many other countries, including the United States and the United Kingdom. However, the proposal and implementation of these laws has been criticised and met with opposition, including from a variety of civil/human rights activists, who contend that the outlawing of these acts would violate people's established rights of freedom of expression. Organisations representing the groups that were victimised during the Holocaust have generally been split in their opinions about anti-Nazi legislation, including that which deals with the legality of Holocaust denial.

Some courts in the United States, Germany, and the United Kingdom have taken judicial notice that the Holocaust occurred in World War II.

Criticism and commentary edit

Scholars have pointed out that countries that specifically ban Holocaust denial generally have legal systems that limit speech in other ways, such as banning hate speech. According to D. D. Guttenplan, this is a split between the "common law countries of the United States, Ireland and many British Commonwealth countries from the civil law countries of continental Europe and Scotland. In civil law countries the law is generally more proscriptive. Also, under the civil law regime, the judge acts more as an inquisitor, gathering and presenting evidence as well as interpreting it".[1] Michael Whine argues that Holocaust denial can inspire violence against Jews; he states, "Jews' experience in the post-World War II era suggests that their rights are best protected in open and tolerant democracies that actively prosecute all forms of racial and religious hatred".[2]

János Kis[3] and in particular András Schiffer[4] feel the work of Holocaust deniers should be protected by a universal right to free speech. An identical argument was used[5] by the Hungarian Constitutional Court (Alkotmánybíróság) led by László Sólyom when it struck down a law against Holocaust denial in 1992. The argument that laws punishing Holocaust denial are incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights have been rejected by institutions of the Council of Europe (the European Commission of Human Rights,[6] the European Court of Human Rights[7]) and also by the United Nations Human Rights Committee.[8]

Historians who oppose such laws include Raul Hilberg,[9] Richard J. Evans, Pierre Vidal-Naquet, and Timothy Garton Ash.[10] Other prominent opponents include Christopher Hitchens, Peter Singer,[11] and Noam Chomsky,[12] who wrote:

It seems to me something of a scandal that it is even necessary to debate these issues two centuries after Voltaire defended the right of free expression for views he detested. It is a poor service to the memory of the victims of the holocaust to adopt a central doctrine of their murderers.[13]

An uproar resulted when Serge Thion used one of Chomsky's essays without explicit permission as a foreword to a book of Holocaust denial essays (see Faurisson affair).

In January 2019, in an interview in The New Yorker in connection with the publication of her book, Antisemitism: Here and Now, Holocaust historian Deborah E. Lipstadt expressed her opposition to laws against expressing Holocaust denial:

I still am a firm opponent of laws against Holocaust denial. First of all, I'm a pretty fierce advocate of the First Amendment. Having been sued for libel, and having had that in my life for about six years, I'm more than ever. Even though libel is not covered by the First Amendment, [David Irving] wouldn't have been able to sue me in this country because he was a public figure.

But I also don't think that these laws are efficacious. Forget the morality – I don't think they work. I think they turn whatever is being outlawed into forbidden fruit. We saw it in Germany, when Mein Kampf was released from the embargo on it a few years ago. People bought it because suddenly it was something they could get ahold of. I just don't think these laws work. And the third reason I'm opposed to them is I don't want politicians making a decision on what can and cannot be said. That scares me enormously.[14]

These laws have also been criticized on the grounds that education is more effective than legislation at combating Holocaust denial and that the laws will make martyrs out of those imprisoned for their violation.[15]

By country edit

Australia edit

While Australia lacks a specific law against Holocaust denial, Holocaust denial is prosecuted in Australia under various laws against "hate speech" and "racial vilification".[16][17] Fredrick Töben was found guilty at Australia's Federal Court of contempt in 2009 for not following a court order in 2002 to desist from publishing anti-semitic material on his Adelaide Institute website. The material queried whether the Holocaust happened, as well as the presence of gas chambers at the Auschwitz death camps.[18]

Austria edit

In Austria, the Verbotsgesetz 1947 provided the legal framework for the process of denazification in Austria and suppression of any potential revival of Nazism. In 1992, it was amended to prohibit the denial or gross minimisation of the Holocaust.

National Socialism Prohibition Law (1947, amendments of 1992)

§ 3g. He who operates in a manner characterized other than that in § § 3a – 3f will be punished (revitalising of the NSDAP or identification with), with imprisonment from one to up to ten years, and in cases of particularly dangerous suspects or activity, be punished with up to twenty years' imprisonment.[19]

§ 3h. As an amendment to § 3 g., whoever denies, grossly plays down, approves or tries to excuse the National Socialist genocide or other National Socialist crimes against humanity in a print publication, in broadcast or other media.[20]

Belgium edit

In Belgium, Holocaust denial was made illegal in 1995.

Negationism Law (1995, amendments of 1999)

Article 1 Whoever, in the circumstances given in article 444 of the Penal Code denies, grossly minimises, attempts to justify, or approves the genocide committed by the German National Socialist Regime during the Second World War shall be punished by a prison sentence of eight days to one year, and by a fine of twenty six francs to five thousand francs. For the application of the previous paragraph, the term genocide is meant in the sense of article 2 of the International Treaty of 9 December 1948 on preventing and combating genocide. In the event of repetitions, the guilty party may in addition have his civic rights suspended in accordance with article 33 of the Penal Code.

Art.2 In the event of a conviction on account of a violation under this Act, it may be ordered that the judgement, in its entity or an excerpt of it, is published in one of more newspapers, and is displayed, to the charge of the guilty party.

Art.3. Chapter VII of the First Book of the Penal Code and Article 85 of the same Code are also applicable to this Act.

Art. 4. The Centre for Equal Opportunities and Opposition to Racism, as well as any association that at the time of the facts had a legal personality for at least five years, and which, on the grounds of its statutes, has the objective of defending moral interests and the honour of the resistance or the deported, may act in law in all legal disputes arising from the application of this Act.[21]

Bosnia and Herzegovina edit

In May 2007 Ekrem Ajanovic, a Bosniak MP in the Bosnian Parliament proposed legislation on criminalizing denial of the Holocaust, genocide and crimes against humanity, the first time a lawmaker in Bosnia and Herzegovina had made such a suggestion. Bosnian Serb MPs voted against it, proposing issue should be resolved within the Criminal Code of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[22] Following this, on 6 May 2009 Bosniak MPs Adem Huskic, Ekrem Ajanovic and Remzija Kadric proposed to parliament a change to the Criminal Code of Bosnia and Herzegovina where Holocaust, genocide and crimes against humanity denial would be criminalized.[23] Bosnian Serb MPs have repeatedly been against such a legislation claiming that the law "would cause disagreement and even animosity" according to SNSD member Lazar Prodanovic.[24]

On 23 July 2021, the High Representative of Bosnia and Herzegovina Valentin Inzko passed a law using the Bonn Powers given to him banning the denial of Genocides, Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes.[25]

Brazil edit

While Holocaust denial is not explicitly prohibited in Brazilian law, precedents tend to lead to conviction. As of 11 February 2022, several bills criminalizing the act are pending in Congress.[26]

Bulgaria edit

In 2011, the Bulgarian Parliament passed amendment to the Bulgarian Criminal Code, introducing new art. 419a.[27][28]

Criminal Code of the Republic of Bulgaria (1968, amendment of 2011)

419a New, SG No. 33/2011, effective 27.05.2011) (1) Anyone who justifies, denies or grossly palliates a crime committed against peace and humanity and thereby poses a risk of violence or instigates hatred among individuals or groups of people united on the grounds of race, colour, religion, origin, national or ethic origin shall be punishable by imprisonment from one to five years.

(2) Anyone who abet another person to commit a crime under Paragraph 1 shall be punishable by imprisonment of up to one year.

Canada edit

The legality of Holocaust denial in Canada has come up in several court cases.[29] In R v Zundel, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that Ernst Zündel, a German-born immigrant, who was a prolific Holocaust denier, could not be convicted for "spreading of false news", as it would be against Canada's Charter guarantee of free expression.[30]

According to The Canadian Press, the federal government announced a bill in 2022 that will change the Criminal Code to outlaw Holocaust denial and similar forms of antisemitic hate speech.[31][32][33][34]

As of 23 June 2022, the willful promotion of antisemitism is illegal in Canada.[35][34] Persons found guilty of wilfully promoting antisemitism by "condoning, denying or downplaying the Holocaust" may receive a prison sentence not more than 2 years or a summary conviction.[34]

Czech Republic edit

In the Czech Republic, Holocaust denial and denial of communist-perpetrated atrocities is illegal.

Law Against Support and Dissemination of Movements Oppressing Human Rights and Freedoms (2001)

§ 405 Anyone who publicly denies, disputes, approves or attempts to justify a Nazi, Communist or other genocide or Nazi, Communist or other crimes against humanity or war crimes or crimes against peace will be punished by imprisonment for six months to three years.[36]

France edit

In France, the Gayssot Act, voted for on 13 July 1990, makes it illegal to question the existence of crimes that fall in the category of crimes against humanity as defined in the London Charter of 1945, on the basis of which Nazi leaders were convicted by the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1945–46. When the act was challenged by Robert Faurisson, the Human Rights Committee upheld it as a necessary means to counter possible antisemitism.[37] Similarly, the applications of Pierre Marais and Roger Garaudy were rejected by the European Court of Human Rights, in 1996 and 2003.[38]

In 2012, the Constitutional Council of France ruled that to extend the Gayssot Act to the Armenian genocide denial was unconstitutional because it violated the freedom of speech.[39][40] The Gayssot Act itself, however, was found consistent with the Constitution four years later.[41]

LAW No 90-615 to repress acts of racism, anti-semitism and xenophobia (1990)

MODIFICATIONS OF THE LAW OF JULY 29, 1881 ON THE FREEDOM OF THE PRESS Art 8. – Article 24 of the Law on the Freedom of the Press of 29 July 1881 is supplemented by the following provisions: In the event of judgment for one of the facts envisaged by the preceding subparagraph, the court will be able moreover to order: Except when the responsibility for the author of the infringement is retained on the base for article 42 and the first subparagraph for article 43 for this law or the first three subparagraphs for article 93-3 for the law No 82-652 for July 29, 1982 on the audio-visual communication, the deprivation of the rights enumerated to the 2o and 3o of article 42 of the penal code for imprisonment of five years maximum;

Art 9. – As an amendment to Article 24 of the law of July 29, 1881 on the freedom of the press, article 24 (a) is written as follows:

Art. 24 (a). – […] those who have disputed the existence of one or more crimes against humanity such as they are defined by Article 6 of the statute of the international tribunal military annexed in the agreement of London of August 8, 1945 and which were carried out either by the members of an organization declared criminal pursuant to Article 9 of the aforementioned statute, or by a person found guilty such crimes by a French or international jurisdiction shall be punished by one month to one year's imprisonment or a fine.

Art 13. – It is inserted, after article 48-1 of the law of 29 July 1881 on the freedom of the press, article 48-2 thus written:

Art. 48-2. – […] publication or publicly expressed opinion encouraging those to whom it is addressed to pass a favourable moral judgment on one or more crimes against humanity and tending to justify these crimes (including collaboration) or vindicate their perpetrators shall be punished by one to five years' imprisonment or a fine.[42]

Germany edit

§ 130 Incitement to hatred edit

In Germany, Volksverhetzung ('incitement of the people')[43][44] is a concept in German criminal law that bans incitement to hatred against segments of the population. It often applies to (though not limited to) trials relating to Holocaust denial in Germany. In addition, Strafgesetzbuch § 86a outlaws various symbols of "unconstitutional organisations", such as Nazi symbolism or the ISIL flag.

§ 130 Incitement to hatred (1985, Revised 1992, 2002, 2005, 2015)[45][46]

(1) Whosoever, in a manner capable of disturbing the public peace:

  1. incites hatred against a national, racial, religious group or a group defined by their ethnic origins, against segments of the population or individuals because of their belonging to one of the aforementioned groups or segments of the population or calls for violent or arbitrary measures against them; or
  2. assaults the human dignity of others by insulting, maliciously maligning an aforementioned group, segments of the population or individuals because of their belonging to one of the aforementioned groups or segments of the population, or defaming segments of the population,

shall be liable to imprisonment from three months to five years.[45][46]

[…]

(3) Whosoever publicly or in a meeting approves of, denies or downplays an act committed under the rule of National Socialism of the kind indicated in section 6 (1) of the Code of International Criminal Law, in a manner capable of disturbing the public peace shall be liable to imprisonment not exceeding five years or a fine.[45][46]

(4) Whoever publicly or in a meeting disturbs the public peace in a manner which violates the dignity of the victims by approving of, glorifying or justifying National Socialist tyranny and arbitrary rule incurs a penalty of imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years or a fine.[45][46]

The definition of section 6 of the Code of Crimes against International Law referenced in the above § 130 is as follows:

§ 6 Genocide

(1) Whoever with the intent of destroying as such, in whole or in part, a national, racial, religious or ethnic group:

  1. kills a member of the group,
  2. causes serious bodily or mental harm to a member of the group, especially of the kind referred to in section 226 of the Criminal Code,
  3. inflicts on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical destruction in whole or in part,
  4. imposes measures intended to prevent births within the group,
  5. forcibly transfers a child of the group to another group, shall be punished with imprisonment for life. […][47]

Other sections edit

The following sections of the German criminal code are also relevant:

§ 189 Disparagement of the Memory of Deceased Persons (1985, amendments of 1992)
Whoever disparages the memory of a deceased person shall be punished with imprisonment for not more than two years or a fine.[48]

§ 194 Application for Criminal Prosecution

(1) An insult shall be prosecuted only upon complaint. If the act was committed through dissemination of writings (Section 11 subsection (3)) or making them publicly accessible in a meeting or through a presentation by radio, then a complaint is not required if the aggrieved party was persecuted as a member of a group under the National Socialist or another rule by force and decree, this group is a part of the population and the insult is connected with this persecution. The act may not, however, be prosecuted ex officio if the aggrieved party objects. When the aggrieved party deceases, the rights of complaint and of objection devolve on the relatives indicated in Section 77 subsection (2). The objection may not be withdrawn.

(2) If the memory of a deceased person has been disparaged, then the relatives indicated in Section 77 subsection (2), are entitled to file a complaint. If the act was committed through dissemination of writings (Section 11 subsection (3)) or making them publicly accessible in a meeting or through a presentation by radio, then a complaint is not required if the deceased person lost his life as a victim of the National Socialist or another rule by force and decree and the disparagement is connected therewith. The act may not, however, be prosecuted ex officio if a person entitled to file a complaint objects. The objection may not be withdrawn. […][49]

Judicial notice edit

The German Federal Supreme Court has, in at least one case, taken judicial notice that the Holocaust occurred.[50]

Greece edit

In September 2014, with a vote of 54 out of 99 present of the 300-member Hellenic Parliament (the body was in summer session at the time), Greece amended its 1979 law 'On the penalization of actions or activities intending unto racial discrimination' (N.927/1979) to make malicious denial of the Holocaust and other crimes against humanity for the purposes of inciting violence, discrimination or hatred or by way of threat or insult, a criminal offense.[51] In contrast to other European countries, the Greek law is not a blanket ban on expressing the opinion that a genocide did not take place, but rather requires an additional condition of intending to cause violence, incite hatred or threaten or insult a protected group.

LAW 927/1979 (as amended by Law 4285/2014)

Article 1 – Public incitement of violence or hatred

1. Whoever intentionally, publicly, verbally or in print, over the internet or through any other medium or means, incites, causes, arouses or solicits acts or activities which are capable of causing discrimination, hatred or violence against a person or group of persons, who are identified on the basis of race, colour, religion, genealogical background, national or ethnic origins, sexual orientation, gender identity or disability, in a way that endangers public order or poses a threat to the life, liberty or bodily integrity of such persons, shall be imprisoned for between three months and (3) years and fined between five and twenty thousand (5.000 - 20.000) euros.

[…]

Article 2 – Public approval or denial or crimes

1. Whoever intentionally, publicly, verbally or in print, over the internet or through any other medium or means, approves, ridicules or maliciously denies the existence or seriousness of crimes of genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, the Holocaust and other crimes of Nazism which have been recognised by decisions of international courts or the Hellenic Parliament and this behaviour is targeted against a group of people, or member thereof, which is identified on the basis of race, colour, religion, genealogical background, national or ethnic origins, sexual orientation, gender identity or disability, when this behaviour is expressed in a way that is capable of inciting violence or hatred or is of a threatening or insulting character against such a group or a member thereof, is subject to the penalties of paragraph 1 of the previous article.[52]

This law was harshly criticised at the time of its passage for its vague language and alleged infringement of freedom of expression. In a letter signed by 139 Greek historians, they argued that "as international experience has shown, such provisions lead down dangerous paths: they critically wound the democratic and inalienable right to freedom of speech, while simultaneously not being at all effective in terms of fighting racism and Nazism. Indeed, they often lead to the opposite result, allowing the enemies of democracy to present themselves to public opinion as "victims" of censorship and authoritarianism. The conditions set forth in the bill, being highly vague and fluid, are unfortunately not a guarantee."[53]

The first prosecution under Article 2 of the law was brought against German historian Heinz A. Richter, who was tried in absentia for denying Nazi atrocities in Crete during World War II. The court found Richter not guilty on the grounds that, while his work was proven to contain historical inaccuracies, there was no evidence he intended to incite hatred against the people of Crete[54] and that the 2014 law was unconstitutional, as it violated the principle of freedom of speech.[55] Though the finding of unconstitutionality is not finally binding, as it was issued by a court of first instance, as of March 2018, no one has been successfully convicted in Greece for genocide denial under this law.[56]

Hungary edit

The National Assembly of Hungary declared the denial or trivialization of the Holocaust a crime punishable by up to three years' imprisonment on 23 February 2010.[57] The law was signed by President László Sólyom in March 2010.[58] On 8 June 2010, the newly elected Fidesz-dominated parliament changed the formulation of the law to "punish those, who deny the genocides committed by national socialist or communist systems, or deny other facts of deeds against humanity".[59]

In 2011, the first man was charged with Holocaust denial in Budapest. The Court sentenced the man to 18 months in prison, suspended for three years, and probation. He also had to visit either Budapest's memorial museum, Auschwitz or Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. He chose his local Holocaust Memorial Center and had to make three visits in total and record his observations.[60]

In January 2015, the court ordered far-right on-line newspaper Kuruc.info to delete its article denying the Holocaust published in July 2013, which was the first ruling in Hungary of its kind.[61] The Association for Civil Liberties (TASZ) offered free legal aid to the website as a protest against restrictions on freedom of speech,[62] but the site refused citing the liberal views of the association, and also refused to delete the article.[63]

Israel edit

In Israel, a law to criminalize Holocaust denial was passed by the Knesset on 8 July 1986.

Denial of Holocaust (Prohibition) Law, 5746-1986

Definitions 1. In this Law, "crime against the Jewish people" and "crime against humanity" have the same respective meanings as in the "Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Law", 5710-1950.

Prohibition of Denial of Holocaust 2. A person who, in writing or by word of mouth, publishes any statement denying or diminishing the proportions of acts committed in the period of the Nazi regime, which are crimes against the Jewish people or crimes against humanity, with intent to defend the perpetrators of those acts or to express sympathy or identification with them, shall be liable to imprisonment for a term of five years.

Prohibition of publication of expression for sympathy for Nazi crimes 3. A person who, in writing or by word of mouth, publishes any statement expressing praise or sympathy for or identification with acts done in the period of the Nazi regime, which are crimes against the Jewish people or crimes against humanity, shall be liable to imprisonment for a term of five years.

Permitted publication 4. The publication of a correct and fair report of a publication prohibited by this Law shall not be regarded as an offence thereunder so long as it is not made with intent to express sympathy or identification with the perpetrators of crimes against the Jewish people or against humanity.

Filing of charge 5. An indictment for offences under this Law shall only be filed by or with the consent of the Attorney-General.[64]

Italy edit

The Italian parliament, extending an anti-racism law from 1975, approved Law 16 June 2016 n. 115, criminalizing the spreading of Holocaust denial and making conviction for the crime subject to imprisonment for two to six years.[65][66]

Liechtenstein edit

Although not specifically outlining national socialist crimes, item five of section 283 of Liechtenstein's criminal code prohibits the denial of genocide.

§ 283 Race discrimination Whoever publicly denies, coarsely trivialises, or tries to justify genocide or other crimes against humanity via word, writing, pictures, electronically transmitted signs, gestures, violent acts or by other means shall be punished with imprisonment for up to two years.[67]

Lithuania edit

In Lithuania, approval and denial of Nazi or Soviet crimes is prohibited.

170(2) Publicly condoning international crimes, crimes of the USSR or Nazi Germany against the Republic of Lithuania and her inhabitants, denial or belittling of such crimes.[68]

Luxembourg edit

In Luxembourg, Article 457-3 of the Criminal Code, Act of 19 July 1997 outlaws Holocaust denial and denial of other genocides.[69] The punishment is imprisonment for between 8 days and 6 months and/or a fine.[69] The offence of "negationism and revisionism" applies to:

...anyone who has contested, minimised, justified or denied the existence of war crimes or crimes against humanity as defined in the statutes of the International Military Tribunal of 8 August 1945 or the existence of a genocide as defined by the Act of 8 August 1985. A complaint must be lodged by the person against whom the offence was committed (victim or association) in order for proceedings to be brought, Article 450 of the Criminal Code, Act of 19 July 1997.[69]

Netherlands edit

While Holocaust denial is not explicitly illegal in the Netherlands (yet), courts can interpret it as a form of spreading hatred and therefore an offence, depending on the context in which the statements are made.[70] According to the Dutch public prosecution office, offensive remarks are only punishable by Dutch law if they equate to discrimination against a particular group.[71] The relevant laws of the Dutch penal code are as follows:

Article 137c

  1. He who in public, either verbally or in writing or image, deliberately offends a group of people because of their race, their religion or beliefs, their hetero- or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental handicap, shall be punished with imprisonment not exceeding one year or a fine of the third category. [...][72]

Article 137d

  1. He who in public, either verbally or in writing or image, incites hatred or discrimination against people or incites acts of violence towards people or property of people because of their race, their religion or beliefs, their gender, their hetero- or homosexual orientation or their physical, psychological or mental handicap, shall be punished with imprisonment not exceeding one year or a fine of the third category. [...][73]

On 14 July 2023, as on the proposal of the dutch Minister of Justice and Security, Yeşilgöz-Zegerius, it has been decided that the above-mentioned laws will be extended to prohibit insulting forms of condoning, denying or trivializing the Holocaust. This is to specifically protect victims and survivors of genocide and other war crimes from particularly hurtful statements that deny and trivialize these types of international crimes. In violating the extension, a punishment of a maximum one year imprisonment will apply. The ban is part of the Bill to Re-implement European Criminal Law.

Poland edit

In Poland, Holocaust denial and the denial of communist crimes is punishable by law.

Act of 18 December 1998 on the Institute of National Remembrance – Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation (Dz.U. 1998 nr 155 poz. 1016)

Article 55
He who publicly and contrary to facts contradicts the crimes mentioned in Article 1, clause 1 shall be subject to a fine or a penalty of deprivation of liberty of up to three years. The judgment shall be made publicly known.

Article 1
This Act shall govern:
1. the registration, collection, access, management and use of the documents of the organs of state security created and collected between 22 July 1944 and 31 December 1989, and the documents of the organs of security of the Third Reich and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics concerning:

a) crimes perpetrated against persons of Polish nationality and Polish citizens of other ethnicity, nationalities in the period between 1 September 1939 and 31 December 1989:
- Nazi crimes,
- communist crimes,
- other crimes constituting crimes against peace, crimes against humanity or war crimes
b) other politically motivated repressive measures committed by functionaries of Polish prosecution bodies or the judiciary or persons acting upon their orders, and disclosed in the content of the rulings given pursuant to the Act of 23 February 1991 on the Acknowledgement as Null and Void Decisions Delivered on Persons Repressed for Activities for the Benefit of the Independent Polish State (Journal of Laws of 1993 No. 34, item 149, of 1995 No. 36, item 159, No. 28, item 143, and of 1998 No. 97, item 604),

2. the rules of procedure as regards the prosecution of crimes specified in point 1 letter a),
3. the protection of the personal data of grieved parties, and

4. the conduct of activities as regards public education.[74]

Portugal edit

Although denial of the Holocaust is not expressly illegal in Portugal, Portuguese law prohibits denial of war crimes if used to incite to discrimination.

Article 240: Racial, religious, or sexual discrimination

[…]

2 — Whoever in a public meeting, in writing intended for dissemination, or by any means of mass media or computer system whose purpose is to disseminate:

[…]
b) defames or slanders an individual or group of individuals because of race, colour, ethnic or national origin, or religion, particularly through the denial of war crimes or those against peace and humanity;
[…]

with intent to incite to racial, religious or sexual discrimination or to encourage it, shall be punished with imprisonment from six months to five years.[75]

Romania edit

In Romania, Emergency Ordinance No. 31 March 13, 2002 prohibits Holocaust denial. It was ratified on 6 May 2006. The law also prohibits racist, fascist, xenophobic symbols, uniforms and gestures: proliferation of which is punishable with imprisonment from between six months to five years.

Emergency Ordinance No. 31 of March 13, 2002

[...]

Article 3. – (1) Establishing a fascist, racist or xenophobic organisation is punishable by imprisonment from 5 to 15 years and the loss of certain rights.

[...]

Article 4. – (1) The dissemination, sale or manufacture of symbols either fascist, racist or xenophobic, and possession of such symbols is punished with imprisonment from 6 months to 5 years and the loss of certain rights.

[...]

Article 5. – Promoting the culture of persons guilty of committing a crime against peace and humanity or promoting fascist, racist or xenophobic ideology, through propaganda, committed by any means, in public, is punishable by imprisonment from 6 months to 5 years and the loss of certain rights.

Article 6. – Denial of the Holocaust in public, or to the effects thereof is punishable by imprisonment from 6 months to 5 years and the loss of certain rights.[76]

In 2021, the first sentence over Holocaust denial was made in Romania. The accused was Vasile Zărnescu, a former Romanian Intelligence Service (SRI) member who published several articles and a book against the veracity of the Holocaust. Zărnescu was sentenced to one year and one month in prison.[77]

Russia edit

In May 2014, Russia's President Vladimir Putin signed a law making the denial of Nazi crimes and "wittingly spreading false information about the activity of the USSR during the years of World War Two" or portraying Nazis as heroes a criminal offence.[78]

Slovakia edit

In Slovakia, Holocaust denial has been a crime since 2001 (law 485/2001), and the penal law (300/2005) specifies in §422d that "who publicly denies, approves or tries to justify the Holocaust, crimes of regimes based on fascist ideology, crimes of regimes based on communist ideology or crimes of other similar movements that use violence, the threat of violence or the threat of other serious harm with the aim of suppressing the fundamental rights and freedoms of persons shall be punished by imprisonment of six months to three years".

Spain edit

Genocide denial was illegal in Spain until the Constitutional Court of Spain ruled that the words "deny or" were unconstitutional in its judgement of 7 November 2007.[79] As a result, Holocaust denial is legal in Spain, although justifying the Holocaust or any other genocide is an offence punishable by imprisonment in accordance with the constitution.[80]

PENAL CODE- BOOK II, TITLE XXIV Crimes against the International Community


Chapter II: Crimes of genocide – Article 607.1

1. Those who, with the intention to total or partially destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, perpetrate the following acts, will be punished:

1) With the prison sentence of fifteen to twenty years, if they killed to some of its members.
If the fact two or more aggravating circumstances concurred in, the greater punishment in degree will prevail.
2) With the prison of fifteen to twenty years, if they sexually attacked to some of members [of the group] or produced some of the injuries anticipated in article 149.
3) With prison sentence of eight to fifteen years, if they subjected the group or anyone of its individuals to conditions of existence that put their lives in danger or seriously disturbed their health, or when they produced some to them of the injuries anticipated in article 150.
4) With the same punishment, if they carried out [unavoidable] displacements of the group or their members, they adopted any measurement that tend to prevent their sort of life or reproduction, or transferred by force individuals from a group to another one.
5) With imprisonment of four to eight years, if they produced any other injury different from the ones indicated in numbers 2) and 3) of this section.

2. The diffusion by any means of ideas or doctrines that deny or justify the crimes in the previous section of this article, or tries the rehabilitation of regimes or institutions which they protect generating practices of such, will be punished with a prison sentence of one to two years.[81]

Switzerland edit

Holocaust denial is not expressly illegal in Switzerland, but the denial of genocide and other crimes against humanity is an imprisonable offence.

Art. 261bis 1

Racial discrimination

Whoever publicly, by word, writing, image, gesture, acts of violence or any other manner, demeans or discriminates against an individual or a group of individuals because of their race, their ethnicity or their religion in a way which undermines human dignity, or on those bases, denies, coarsely minimizes or seeks to justify a genocide or other crimes against humanity [...] shall be punished with up to three years' imprisonment or a fine.[82]

Ukraine edit

In September 2021, the Verkhovna Rada passed a law defining antisemitism and banning it in the country. This law includes denying the mass extermination of Jews in the Holocaust as part of its definition of antisemitism.[83] When committed by an individual is punishable by a fine or a prison sentence of up to five years. Public officials would also be fined or imprisoned for up to five years, and banned from holding certain offices for up to three years.

United Kingdom edit

There is no statute in the United Kingdom making Holocaust denial illegal; however judicial notice that the Holocaust occurred was taken in the case of R v Chabloz and the defendant in that case was charged with sharing 'grossly offensive' material related to Holocaust denial. Some contend that this judgement sets a precedent for Holocaust denial related material being deemed "grossly offensive" and contrary to the Communications Act 2003.[84]

United States edit

In the United States, Holocaust denial is constitutionally protected free speech because of the First Amendment.[85]

A United States court in 1981, in a case brought by Mel Mermelstein, took judicial notice of the occurrence of gassings in Auschwitz during the Holocaust, declaring that a legally incontestable fact.[86][87]

European Union edit

The European Union's Executive Commission proposed a European Union-wide anti-racism xenophobia law in 2001, which included the criminalization of Holocaust denial. On 15 July 1996, the Council of the European Union adopted the Joint action/96/443/JHA concerning action to combat racism and xenophobia.[88][89] During the German presidency there was an attempt to extend this ban.[90] Full implementation was blocked by the United Kingdom and the Nordic countries because of the need to balance the restrictions on voicing racist opinions against the freedom of expression.[91] As a result, a compromise has been reached within the EU and while the EU has not prohibited Holocaust denial outright, a maximum term of three years in jail is optionally available to all member nations for "denying or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes".[92][93]

The EU extradition policy regarding Holocaust denial was tested in the UK during the 2008 failed extradition case brought against the suspected Holocaust denier Fredrick Töben[94] by the German government. As there is no specific crime of Holocaust denial in the UK, the German government had applied for Töben's extradition for racial and xenophobic crimes. Töben's extradition was refused by the Westminster Magistrates' Court, and the German government withdrew its appeal to the High Court.

European Union Framework Decision for Combating Racism and Xenophobia (2007)

The text establishes that the following intentional conduct will be punishable in all EU Member States:

- Publicly inciting to violence or hatred, even by dissemination or distribution of tracts, pictures or other material, 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.
- Publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising
- crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes as defined in the Statute of the International Criminal Court (Articles 6, 7 and 8) 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, and
- crimes defined by the Tribunal of Nuremberg (Article 6 of the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, London Agreement of 1945) 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.

Member States may choose to punish only conduct which is either carried out in a manner likely to disturb public order or which is threatening, abusive or insulting.

The reference to religion is intended to cover, at least, conduct which is a pretext for directing acts against a group of persons or a member of such a group defined by reference to race, colour, descent, or national or ethnic origin.

Member States will ensure that these conducts are punishable by criminal penalties of a maximum of at least between 1 and 3 years of imprisonment.[95]

2019 European Court of Human Rights decision edit

On 3 October 2019, in the case Pastörs v. Germany (application no. 55225/14),[96] the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) unanimously ruled that a decision of the German courts determining that the statement made by the German politician, Udo Pastörs, that "the so-called Holocaust is being used for political and commercial purposes" as well as other Holocaust denial comments were a violation of the memory of the dead and an intentional defamation of the Jewish people and that the courts had not violated Article 10 (freedom of expression) of the European Convention on Human Rights in convicting him for this offense. Furthermore, the ECHR decided by four votes to three that there had been no violation of Article 6 § 1 (right to a fair trial) of the European Convention on Human Rights.[97]

Prosecutions and convictions edit

Laws against Holocaust denial have been enforced in most jurisdictions that have them. Convictions and sentencings include:

Date Name Country where the sentence was pronounced Sentence
September 1987, June 1999, April 2016 Jean-Marie Le Pen France, Germany fines of €183,000 (1987), €6,000 (1999)[98] and €30,000 (2016)[99]
27 February 1998 Roger Garaudy France 6 months' imprisonment (suspended), ₣240,000 (€37,500) fine[100]
21 July 1998 Jürgen Graf Switzerland 15 months' imprisonment (fled Switzerland to avoid sentence)[101]
21 July 1998 Gerhard Förster Switzerland 12 months' imprisonment, disgorgement[102]
8 April 1999 Fredrick Töben Australia 7 months' imprisonment Mannheim, Germany – retrial – 2011 indefinitely stayed by judge Dr Meinerzhagen. 1 October – 19 November 2008, London, extradition to Mannheim, Germany, on European Arrest Warrant issued by Germany, failed. 15 August – 12 November 2009, Adelaide, Australia – for contempt of court because he refused to stop questioning the Holocaust's 3 basics: 6 million, systematic state extermination, gas chambers as murder weapon.
27 May 1999 Jean Plantin France 6 months' imprisonment (suspended), fine, damages[103]
11 April 2000 Gaston-Armand Amaudruz Switzerland 1 year's imprisonment, damages[104]
20 February 2006 David Irving Austria 3 years' imprisonment.[105] Released and deported after serving 13 months.
15 March 2006 Germar Rudolf Germany 212 years' imprisonment[106]
3 October 2006 Robert Faurisson France €7,500 fine, 3 months' probation[107]
15 February 2007 Ernst Zündel Germany 5 years' imprisonment[108]
8 November 2007 Vincent Reynouard France 1 year's imprisonment and a fine of 10,000 euros[109]
14 January 2008 Wolfgang Fröhlich Austria 6 years' imprisonment (third offence)[110]
15 January 2008 Sylvia Stolz Germany 312 years' imprisonment[111]
11 March 2009 Horst Mahler Germany 5 years' imprisonment[112]
27 October 2009 Richard Williamson Germany €12,000 fine[113] (later overturned)[citation needed]
16 August 2012 Udo Pastörs Germany 8-month’ imprisonment, suspended on probation.[114]
31 January 2013 Gyorgy Nagy Hungary 18-month suspended jail sentence[115]
11 February 2015 Vincent Reynouard France 2 years' imprisonment[116]
12 November 2015 Ursula Haverbeck Germany 10 months' imprisonment[117]
26 October 2018 Alfred Schaefer Germany 3 years and 2 months imprisonment[118][119]
26 October 2018 Monika Schaefer Germany 10 months time served[118][119]
4 February 2021 Vasile Zărnescu Romania 13 months' imprisonment[120]
31 March 2022 Philip Hassler (Mr. Bond) Austria 10 years' imprisonment[121]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^

References edit

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External links edit

  • Jonathan Josephs, Holocaust Denial Legislation – A justifiable infringement of freedom of speech? 24 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine (Université Libre de Bruxelles; Working Papers du Centre Perelman de philosophie du droit, n° 2008/3)
  • Voices on Antisemitism Interview with Brigitte Zypries from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum

legality, holocaust, denial, between, 1941, 1945, nazi, germany, perpetrated, holocaust, large, scale, genocidal, campaign, which, approximately, million, european, jews, were, systematically, murdered, throughout, german, occupied, europe, since, world, sever. Between 1941 and 1945 Nazi Germany perpetrated the Holocaust a large scale genocidal campaign in which approximately six million European Jews were systematically murdered throughout German occupied Europe Since World War II several countries have criminalised Holocaust denial the assertion by antisemites that the genocide was a myth fabrication or exaggeration Currently 17 European countries a along with Israel and Canada have laws in place that cover Holocaust denial as a punishable offence Many countries also have broader laws that criminalise genocide denial including that of the Holocaust Among the countries that have banned Holocaust denial Russia Austria Germany Hungary Poland and Romania have also banned Nazi symbols Any expression of genocide justification is also a criminal offence in several countries as is any attempt to portray Nazism in a positive light Countries that as of 2023 update have legislation in place criminalising Holocaust denial are highlighted in redLegislation against Holocaust denial has been proposed in many other countries including the United States and the United Kingdom However the proposal and implementation of these laws has been criticised and met with opposition including from a variety of civil human rights activists who contend that the outlawing of these acts would violate people s established rights of freedom of expression Organisations representing the groups that were victimised during the Holocaust have generally been split in their opinions about anti Nazi legislation including that which deals with the legality of Holocaust denial Some courts in the United States Germany and the United Kingdom have taken judicial notice that the Holocaust occurred in World War II Contents 1 Criticism and commentary 2 By country 2 1 Australia 2 2 Austria 2 3 Belgium 2 4 Bosnia and Herzegovina 2 5 Brazil 2 6 Bulgaria 2 7 Canada 2 8 Czech Republic 2 9 France 2 10 Germany 2 10 1 130 Incitement to hatred 2 10 2 Other sections 2 10 3 Judicial notice 2 11 Greece 2 12 Hungary 2 13 Israel 2 14 Italy 2 15 Liechtenstein 2 16 Lithuania 2 17 Luxembourg 2 18 Netherlands 2 19 Poland 2 20 Portugal 2 21 Romania 2 22 Russia 2 23 Slovakia 2 24 Spain 2 25 Switzerland 2 26 Ukraine 2 27 United Kingdom 2 28 United States 2 29 European Union 2 30 2019 European Court of Human Rights decision 3 Prosecutions and convictions 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksCriticism and commentary editScholars have pointed out that countries that specifically ban Holocaust denial generally have legal systems that limit speech in other ways such as banning hate speech According to D D Guttenplan this is a split between the common law countries of the United States Ireland and many British Commonwealth countries from the civil law countries of continental Europe and Scotland In civil law countries the law is generally more proscriptive Also under the civil law regime the judge acts more as an inquisitor gathering and presenting evidence as well as interpreting it 1 Michael Whine argues that Holocaust denial can inspire violence against Jews he states Jews experience in the post World War II era suggests that their rights are best protected in open and tolerant democracies that actively prosecute all forms of racial and religious hatred 2 Janos Kis 3 and in particular Andras Schiffer 4 feel the work of Holocaust deniers should be protected by a universal right to free speech An identical argument was used 5 by the Hungarian Constitutional Court Alkotmanybirosag led by Laszlo Solyom when it struck down a law against Holocaust denial in 1992 The argument that laws punishing Holocaust denial are incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights have been rejected by institutions of the Council of Europe the European Commission of Human Rights 6 the European Court of Human Rights 7 and also by the United Nations Human Rights Committee 8 Historians who oppose such laws include Raul Hilberg 9 Richard J Evans Pierre Vidal Naquet and Timothy Garton Ash 10 Other prominent opponents include Christopher Hitchens Peter Singer 11 and Noam Chomsky 12 who wrote It seems to me something of a scandal that it is even necessary to debate these issues two centuries after Voltaire defended the right of free expression for views he detested It is a poor service to the memory of the victims of the holocaust to adopt a central doctrine of their murderers 13 An uproar resulted when Serge Thion used one of Chomsky s essays without explicit permission as a foreword to a book of Holocaust denial essays see Faurisson affair In January 2019 in an interview in The New Yorker in connection with the publication of her book Antisemitism Here and Now Holocaust historian Deborah E Lipstadt expressed her opposition to laws against expressing Holocaust denial I still am a firm opponent of laws against Holocaust denial First of all I m a pretty fierce advocate of the First Amendment Having been sued for libel and having had that in my life for about six years I m more than ever Even though libel is not covered by the First Amendment David Irving wouldn t have been able to sue me in this country because he was a public figure But I also don t think that these laws are efficacious Forget the morality I don t think they work I think they turn whatever is being outlawed into forbidden fruit We saw it in Germany when Mein Kampf was released from the embargo on it a few years ago People bought it because suddenly it was something they could get ahold of I just don t think these laws work And the third reason I m opposed to them is I don t want politicians making a decision on what can and cannot be said That scares me enormously 14 These laws have also been criticized on the grounds that education is more effective than legislation at combating Holocaust denial and that the laws will make martyrs out of those imprisoned for their violation 15 By country editAustralia edit While Australia lacks a specific law against Holocaust denial Holocaust denial is prosecuted in Australia under various laws against hate speech and racial vilification 16 17 Fredrick Toben was found guilty at Australia s Federal Court of contempt in 2009 for not following a court order in 2002 to desist from publishing anti semitic material on his Adelaide Institute website The material queried whether the Holocaust happened as well as the presence of gas chambers at the Auschwitz death camps 18 Austria edit In Austria the Verbotsgesetz 1947 provided the legal framework for the process of denazification in Austria and suppression of any potential revival of Nazism In 1992 it was amended to prohibit the denial or gross minimisation of the Holocaust National Socialism Prohibition Law 1947 amendments of 1992 3g He who operates in a manner characterized other than that in 3a 3f will be punished revitalising of the NSDAP or identification with with imprisonment from one to up to ten years and in cases of particularly dangerous suspects or activity be punished with up to twenty years imprisonment 19 3h As an amendment to 3 g whoever denies grossly plays down approves or tries to excuse the National Socialist genocide or other National Socialist crimes against humanity in a print publication in broadcast or other media 20 Belgium edit In Belgium Holocaust denial was made illegal in 1995 Negationism Law 1995 amendments of 1999 Article 1 Whoever in the circumstances given in article 444 of the Penal Code denies grossly minimises attempts to justify or approves the genocide committed by the German National Socialist Regime during the Second World War shall be punished by a prison sentence of eight days to one year and by a fine of twenty six francs to five thousand francs For the application of the previous paragraph the term genocide is meant in the sense of article 2 of the International Treaty of 9 December 1948 on preventing and combating genocide In the event of repetitions the guilty party may in addition have his civic rights suspended in accordance with article 33 of the Penal Code Art 2 In the event of a conviction on account of a violation under this Act it may be ordered that the judgement in its entity or an excerpt of it is published in one of more newspapers and is displayed to the charge of the guilty party Art 3 Chapter VII of the First Book of the Penal Code and Article 85 of the same Code are also applicable to this Act Art 4 The Centre for Equal Opportunities and Opposition to Racism as well as any association that at the time of the facts had a legal personality for at least five years and which on the grounds of its statutes has the objective of defending moral interests and the honour of the resistance or the deported may act in law in all legal disputes arising from the application of this Act 21 Bosnia and Herzegovina edit In May 2007 Ekrem Ajanovic a Bosniak MP in the Bosnian Parliament proposed legislation on criminalizing denial of the Holocaust genocide and crimes against humanity the first time a lawmaker in Bosnia and Herzegovina had made such a suggestion Bosnian Serb MPs voted against it proposing issue should be resolved within the Criminal Code of Bosnia and Herzegovina 22 Following this on 6 May 2009 Bosniak MPs Adem Huskic Ekrem Ajanovic and Remzija Kadric proposed to parliament a change to the Criminal Code of Bosnia and Herzegovina where Holocaust genocide and crimes against humanity denial would be criminalized 23 Bosnian Serb MPs have repeatedly been against such a legislation claiming that the law would cause disagreement and even animosity according to SNSD member Lazar Prodanovic 24 On 23 July 2021 the High Representative of Bosnia and Herzegovina Valentin Inzko passed a law using the Bonn Powers given to him banning the denial of Genocides Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes 25 Brazil edit While Holocaust denial is not explicitly prohibited in Brazilian law precedents tend to lead to conviction As of 11 February 2022 several bills criminalizing the act are pending in Congress 26 Bulgaria edit In 2011 the Bulgarian Parliament passed amendment to the Bulgarian Criminal Code introducing new art 419a 27 28 Criminal Code of the Republic of Bulgaria 1968 amendment of 2011 419a New SG No 33 2011 effective 27 05 2011 1 Anyone who justifies denies or grossly palliates a crime committed against peace and humanity and thereby poses a risk of violence or instigates hatred among individuals or groups of people united on the grounds of race colour religion origin national or ethic origin shall be punishable by imprisonment from one to five years 2 Anyone who abet another person to commit a crime under Paragraph 1 shall be punishable by imprisonment of up to one year Canada edit The legality of Holocaust denial in Canada has come up in several court cases 29 In R v Zundel the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that Ernst Zundel a German born immigrant who was a prolific Holocaust denier could not be convicted for spreading of false news as it would be against Canada s Charter guarantee of free expression 30 According to The Canadian Press the federal government announced a bill in 2022 that will change the Criminal Code to outlaw Holocaust denial and similar forms of antisemitic hate speech 31 32 33 34 As of 23 June 2022 the willful promotion of antisemitism is illegal in Canada 35 34 Persons found guilty of wilfully promoting antisemitism by condoning denying or downplaying the Holocaust may receive a prison sentence not more than 2 years or a summary conviction 34 Czech Republic edit In the Czech Republic Holocaust denial and denial of communist perpetrated atrocities is illegal Law Against Support and Dissemination of Movements Oppressing Human Rights and Freedoms 2001 405 Anyone who publicly denies disputes approves or attempts to justify a Nazi Communist or other genocide or Nazi Communist or other crimes against humanity or war crimes or crimes against peace will be punished by imprisonment for six months to three years 36 France edit In France the Gayssot Act voted for on 13 July 1990 makes it illegal to question the existence of crimes that fall in the category of crimes against humanity as defined in the London Charter of 1945 on the basis of which Nazi leaders were convicted by the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1945 46 When the act was challenged by Robert Faurisson the Human Rights Committee upheld it as a necessary means to counter possible antisemitism 37 Similarly the applications of Pierre Marais and Roger Garaudy were rejected by the European Court of Human Rights in 1996 and 2003 38 In 2012 the Constitutional Council of France ruled that to extend the Gayssot Act to the Armenian genocide denial was unconstitutional because it violated the freedom of speech 39 40 The Gayssot Act itself however was found consistent with the Constitution four years later 41 LAW No 90 615 to repress acts of racism anti semitism and xenophobia 1990 MODIFICATIONS OF THE LAW OF JULY 29 1881 ON THE FREEDOM OF THE PRESS Art 8 Article 24 of the Law on the Freedom of the Press of 29 July 1881 is supplemented by the following provisions In the event of judgment for one of the facts envisaged by the preceding subparagraph the court will be able moreover to order Except when the responsibility for the author of the infringement is retained on the base for article 42 and the first subparagraph for article 43 for this law or the first three subparagraphs for article 93 3 for the law No 82 652 for July 29 1982 on the audio visual communication the deprivation of the rights enumerated to the 2o and 3o of article 42 of the penal code for imprisonment of five years maximum Art 9 As an amendment to Article 24 of the law of July 29 1881 on the freedom of the press article 24 a is written as follows Art 24 a those who have disputed the existence of one or more crimes against humanity such as they are defined by Article 6 of the statute of the international tribunal military annexed in the agreement of London of August 8 1945 and which were carried out either by the members of an organization declared criminal pursuant to Article 9 of the aforementioned statute or by a person found guilty such crimes by a French or international jurisdiction shall be punished by one month to one year s imprisonment or a fine Art 13 It is inserted after article 48 1 of the law of 29 July 1881 on the freedom of the press article 48 2 thus written Art 48 2 publication or publicly expressed opinion encouraging those to whom it is addressed to pass a favourable moral judgment on one or more crimes against humanity and tending to justify these crimes including collaboration or vindicate their perpetrators shall be punished by one to five years imprisonment or a fine 42 Germany edit 130 Incitement to hatred edit In Germany Volksverhetzung incitement of the people 43 44 is a concept in German criminal law that bans incitement to hatred against segments of the population It often applies to though not limited to trials relating to Holocaust denial in Germany In addition Strafgesetzbuch 86a outlaws various symbols of unconstitutional organisations such as Nazi symbolism or the ISIL flag 130 Incitement to hatred 1985 Revised 1992 2002 2005 2015 45 46 1 Whosoever in a manner capable of disturbing the public peace incites hatred against a national racial religious group or a group defined by their ethnic origins against segments of the population or individuals because of their belonging to one of the aforementioned groups or segments of the population or calls for violent or arbitrary measures against them or assaults the human dignity of others by insulting maliciously maligning an aforementioned group segments of the population or individuals because of their belonging to one of the aforementioned groups or segments of the population or defaming segments of the population shall be liable to imprisonment from three months to five years 45 46 3 Whosoever publicly or in a meeting approves of denies or downplays an act committed under the rule of National Socialism of the kind indicated in section 6 1 of the Code of International Criminal Law in a manner capable of disturbing the public peace shall be liable to imprisonment not exceeding five years or a fine 45 46 4 Whoever publicly or in a meeting disturbs the public peace in a manner which violates the dignity of the victims by approving of glorifying or justifying National Socialist tyranny and arbitrary rule incurs a penalty of imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years or a fine 45 46 The definition of section 6 of the Code of Crimes against International Law referenced in the above 130 is as follows 6 Genocide 1 Whoever with the intent of destroying as such in whole or in part a national racial religious or ethnic group kills a member of the group causes serious bodily or mental harm to a member of the group especially of the kind referred to in section 226 of the Criminal Code inflicts on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical destruction in whole or in part imposes measures intended to prevent births within the group forcibly transfers a child of the group to another group shall be punished with imprisonment for life 47 Other sections edit The following sections of the German criminal code are also relevant 189 Disparagement of the Memory of Deceased Persons 1985 amendments of 1992 Whoever disparages the memory of a deceased person shall be punished with imprisonment for not more than two years or a fine 48 194 Application for Criminal Prosecution 1 An insult shall be prosecuted only upon complaint If the act was committed through dissemination of writings Section 11 subsection 3 or making them publicly accessible in a meeting or through a presentation by radio then a complaint is not required if the aggrieved party was persecuted as a member of a group under the National Socialist or another rule by force and decree this group is a part of the population and the insult is connected with this persecution The act may not however be prosecuted ex officio if the aggrieved party objects When the aggrieved party deceases the rights of complaint and of objection devolve on the relatives indicated in Section 77 subsection 2 The objection may not be withdrawn 2 If the memory of a deceased person has been disparaged then the relatives indicated in Section 77 subsection 2 are entitled to file a complaint If the act was committed through dissemination of writings Section 11 subsection 3 or making them publicly accessible in a meeting or through a presentation by radio then a complaint is not required if the deceased person lost his life as a victim of the National Socialist or another rule by force and decree and the disparagement is connected therewith The act may not however be prosecuted ex officio if a person entitled to file a complaint objects The objection may not be withdrawn 49 Judicial notice edit The German Federal Supreme Court has in at least one case taken judicial notice that the Holocaust occurred 50 Greece edit In September 2014 with a vote of 54 out of 99 present of the 300 member Hellenic Parliament the body was in summer session at the time Greece amended its 1979 law On the penalization of actions or activities intending unto racial discrimination N 927 1979 to make malicious denial of the Holocaust and other crimes against humanity for the purposes of inciting violence discrimination or hatred or by way of threat or insult a criminal offense 51 In contrast to other European countries the Greek law is not a blanket ban on expressing the opinion that a genocide did not take place but rather requires an additional condition of intending to cause violence incite hatred or threaten or insult a protected group LAW 927 1979 as amended by Law 4285 2014 Article 1 Public incitement of violence or hatred1 Whoever intentionally publicly verbally or in print over the internet or through any other medium or means incites causes arouses or solicits acts or activities which are capable of causing discrimination hatred or violence against a person or group of persons who are identified on the basis of race colour religion genealogical background national or ethnic origins sexual orientation gender identity or disability in a way that endangers public order or poses a threat to the life liberty or bodily integrity of such persons shall be imprisoned for between three months and 3 years and fined between five and twenty thousand 5 000 20 000 euros Article 2 Public approval or denial or crimes1 Whoever intentionally publicly verbally or in print over the internet or through any other medium or means approves ridicules or maliciously denies the existence or seriousness of crimes of genocide war crimes crimes against humanity the Holocaust and other crimes of Nazism which have been recognised by decisions of international courts or the Hellenic Parliament and this behaviour is targeted against a group of people or member thereof which is identified on the basis of race colour religion genealogical background national or ethnic origins sexual orientation gender identity or disability when this behaviour is expressed in a way that is capable of inciting violence or hatred or is of a threatening or insulting character against such a group or a member thereof is subject to the penalties of paragraph 1 of the previous article 52 This law was harshly criticised at the time of its passage for its vague language and alleged infringement of freedom of expression In a letter signed by 139 Greek historians they argued that as international experience has shown such provisions lead down dangerous paths they critically wound the democratic and inalienable right to freedom of speech while simultaneously not being at all effective in terms of fighting racism and Nazism Indeed they often lead to the opposite result allowing the enemies of democracy to present themselves to public opinion as victims of censorship and authoritarianism The conditions set forth in the bill being highly vague and fluid are unfortunately not a guarantee 53 The first prosecution under Article 2 of the law was brought against German historian Heinz A Richter who was tried in absentia for denying Nazi atrocities in Crete during World War II The court found Richter not guilty on the grounds that while his work was proven to contain historical inaccuracies there was no evidence he intended to incite hatred against the people of Crete 54 and that the 2014 law was unconstitutional as it violated the principle of freedom of speech 55 Though the finding of unconstitutionality is not finally binding as it was issued by a court of first instance as of March 2018 no one has been successfully convicted in Greece for genocide denial under this law 56 Hungary edit The National Assembly of Hungary declared the denial or trivialization of the Holocaust a crime punishable by up to three years imprisonment on 23 February 2010 57 The law was signed by President Laszlo Solyom in March 2010 58 On 8 June 2010 the newly elected Fidesz dominated parliament changed the formulation of the law to punish those who deny the genocides committed by national socialist or communist systems or deny other facts of deeds against humanity 59 In 2011 the first man was charged with Holocaust denial in Budapest The Court sentenced the man to 18 months in prison suspended for three years and probation He also had to visit either Budapest s memorial museum Auschwitz or Yad Vashem in Jerusalem He chose his local Holocaust Memorial Center and had to make three visits in total and record his observations 60 In January 2015 the court ordered far right on line newspaper Kuruc info to delete its article denying the Holocaust published in July 2013 which was the first ruling in Hungary of its kind 61 The Association for Civil Liberties TASZ offered free legal aid to the website as a protest against restrictions on freedom of speech 62 but the site refused citing the liberal views of the association and also refused to delete the article 63 Israel edit In Israel a law to criminalize Holocaust denial was passed by the Knesset on 8 July 1986 Denial of Holocaust Prohibition Law 5746 1986Definitions 1 In this Law crime against the Jewish people and crime against humanity have the same respective meanings as in the Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Law 5710 1950 Prohibition of Denial of Holocaust 2 A person who in writing or by word of mouth publishes any statement denying or diminishing the proportions of acts committed in the period of the Nazi regime which are crimes against the Jewish people or crimes against humanity with intent to defend the perpetrators of those acts or to express sympathy or identification with them shall be liable to imprisonment for a term of five years Prohibition of publication of expression for sympathy for Nazi crimes 3 A person who in writing or by word of mouth publishes any statement expressing praise or sympathy for or identification with acts done in the period of the Nazi regime which are crimes against the Jewish people or crimes against humanity shall be liable to imprisonment for a term of five years Permitted publication 4 The publication of a correct and fair report of a publication prohibited by this Law shall not be regarded as an offence thereunder so long as it is not made with intent to express sympathy or identification with the perpetrators of crimes against the Jewish people or against humanity Filing of charge 5 An indictment for offences under this Law shall only be filed by or with the consent of the Attorney General 64 Italy edit The Italian parliament extending an anti racism law from 1975 approved Law 16 June 2016 n 115 criminalizing the spreading of Holocaust denial and making conviction for the crime subject to imprisonment for two to six years 65 66 Liechtenstein edit Although not specifically outlining national socialist crimes item five of section 283 of Liechtenstein s criminal code prohibits the denial of genocide 283 Race discrimination Whoever publicly denies coarsely trivialises or tries to justify genocide or other crimes against humanity via word writing pictures electronically transmitted signs gestures violent acts or by other means shall be punished with imprisonment for up to two years 67 Lithuania edit In Lithuania approval and denial of Nazi or Soviet crimes is prohibited 170 2 Publicly condoning international crimes crimes of the USSR or Nazi Germany against the Republic of Lithuania and her inhabitants denial or belittling of such crimes 68 Luxembourg edit In Luxembourg Article 457 3 of the Criminal Code Act of 19 July 1997 outlaws Holocaust denial and denial of other genocides 69 The punishment is imprisonment for between 8 days and 6 months and or a fine 69 The offence of negationism and revisionism applies to anyone who has contested minimised justified or denied the existence of war crimes or crimes against humanity as defined in the statutes of the International Military Tribunal of 8 August 1945 or the existence of a genocide as defined by the Act of 8 August 1985 A complaint must be lodged by the person against whom the offence was committed victim or association in order for proceedings to be brought Article 450 of the Criminal Code Act of 19 July 1997 69 Netherlands edit While Holocaust denial is not explicitly illegal in the Netherlands yet courts can interpret it as a form of spreading hatred and therefore an offence depending on the context in which the statements are made 70 According to the Dutch public prosecution office offensive remarks are only punishable by Dutch law if they equate to discrimination against a particular group 71 The relevant laws of the Dutch penal code are as follows Article 137cHe who in public either verbally or in writing or image deliberately offends a group of people because of their race their religion or beliefs their hetero or homosexual orientation or their physical psychological or mental handicap shall be punished with imprisonment not exceeding one year or a fine of the third category 72 Article 137dHe who in public either verbally or in writing or image incites hatred or discrimination against people or incites acts of violence towards people or property of people because of their race their religion or beliefs their gender their hetero or homosexual orientation or their physical psychological or mental handicap shall be punished with imprisonment not exceeding one year or a fine of the third category 73 On 14 July 2023 as on the proposal of the dutch Minister of Justice and Security Yesilgoz Zegerius it has been decided that the above mentioned laws will be extended to prohibit insulting forms of condoning denying or trivializing the Holocaust This is to specifically protect victims and survivors of genocide and other war crimes from particularly hurtful statements that deny and trivialize these types of international crimes In violating the extension a punishment of a maximum one year imprisonment will apply The ban is part of the Bill to Re implement European Criminal Law Poland edit In Poland Holocaust denial and the denial of communist crimes is punishable by law Act of 18 December 1998 on the Institute of National Remembrance Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation Dz U 1998 nr 155 poz 1016 Article 55 He who publicly and contrary to facts contradicts the crimes mentioned in Article 1 clause 1 shall be subject to a fine or a penalty of deprivation of liberty of up to three years The judgment shall be made publicly known Article 1 This Act shall govern 1 the registration collection access management and use of the documents of the organs of state security created and collected between 22 July 1944 and 31 December 1989 and the documents of the organs of security of the Third Reich and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics concerning a crimes perpetrated against persons of Polish nationality and Polish citizens of other ethnicity nationalities in the period between 1 September 1939 and 31 December 1989 Nazi crimes communist crimes other crimes constituting crimes against peace crimes against humanity or war crimes dd b other politically motivated repressive measures committed by functionaries of Polish prosecution bodies or the judiciary or persons acting upon their orders and disclosed in the content of the rulings given pursuant to the Act of 23 February 1991 on the Acknowledgement as Null and Void Decisions Delivered on Persons Repressed for Activities for the Benefit of the Independent Polish State Journal of Laws of 1993 No 34 item 149 of 1995 No 36 item 159 No 28 item 143 and of 1998 No 97 item 604 2 the rules of procedure as regards the prosecution of crimes specified in point 1 letter a 3 the protection of the personal data of grieved parties and4 the conduct of activities as regards public education 74 Portugal edit Although denial of the Holocaust is not expressly illegal in Portugal Portuguese law prohibits denial of war crimes if used to incite to discrimination Article 240 Racial religious or sexual discrimination 2 Whoever in a public meeting in writing intended for dissemination or by any means of mass media or computer system whose purpose is to disseminate b defames or slanders an individual or group of individuals because of race colour ethnic or national origin or religion particularly through the denial of war crimes or those against peace and humanity with intent to incite to racial religious or sexual discrimination or to encourage it shall be punished with imprisonment from six months to five years 75 Romania edit In Romania Emergency Ordinance No 31 March 13 2002 prohibits Holocaust denial It was ratified on 6 May 2006 The law also prohibits racist fascist xenophobic symbols uniforms and gestures proliferation of which is punishable with imprisonment from between six months to five years Emergency Ordinance No 31 of March 13 2002 Article 3 1 Establishing a fascist racist or xenophobic organisation is punishable by imprisonment from 5 to 15 years and the loss of certain rights Article 4 1 The dissemination sale or manufacture of symbols either fascist racist or xenophobic and possession of such symbols is punished with imprisonment from 6 months to 5 years and the loss of certain rights Article 5 Promoting the culture of persons guilty of committing a crime against peace and humanity or promoting fascist racist or xenophobic ideology through propaganda committed by any means in public is punishable by imprisonment from 6 months to 5 years and the loss of certain rights Article 6 Denial of the Holocaust in public or to the effects thereof is punishable by imprisonment from 6 months to 5 years and the loss of certain rights 76 In 2021 the first sentence over Holocaust denial was made in Romania The accused was Vasile Zărnescu a former Romanian Intelligence Service SRI member who published several articles and a book against the veracity of the Holocaust Zărnescu was sentenced to one year and one month in prison 77 Russia edit Main article Law Against Rehabilitation of Nazism In May 2014 Russia s President Vladimir Putin signed a law making the denial of Nazi crimes and wittingly spreading false information about the activity of the USSR during the years of World War Two or portraying Nazis as heroes a criminal offence 78 Slovakia edit In Slovakia Holocaust denial has been a crime since 2001 law 485 2001 and the penal law 300 2005 specifies in 422d that who publicly denies approves or tries to justify the Holocaust crimes of regimes based on fascist ideology crimes of regimes based on communist ideology or crimes of other similar movements that use violence the threat of violence or the threat of other serious harm with the aim of suppressing the fundamental rights and freedoms of persons shall be punished by imprisonment of six months to three years Spain edit Genocide denial was illegal in Spain until the Constitutional Court of Spain ruled that the words deny or were unconstitutional in its judgement of 7 November 2007 79 As a result Holocaust denial is legal in Spain although justifying the Holocaust or any other genocide is an offence punishable by imprisonment in accordance with the constitution 80 PENAL CODE BOOK II TITLE XXIV Crimes against the International CommunityChapter II Crimes of genocide Article 607 11 Those who with the intention to total or partially destroy a national ethnic racial or religious group perpetrate the following acts will be punished 1 With the prison sentence of fifteen to twenty years if they killed to some of its members If the fact two or more aggravating circumstances concurred in the greater punishment in degree will prevail dd 2 With the prison of fifteen to twenty years if they sexually attacked to some of members of the group or produced some of the injuries anticipated in article 149 3 With prison sentence of eight to fifteen years if they subjected the group or anyone of its individuals to conditions of existence that put their lives in danger or seriously disturbed their health or when they produced some to them of the injuries anticipated in article 150 4 With the same punishment if they carried out unavoidable displacements of the group or their members they adopted any measurement that tend to prevent their sort of life or reproduction or transferred by force individuals from a group to another one 5 With imprisonment of four to eight years if they produced any other injury different from the ones indicated in numbers 2 and 3 of this section 2 The diffusion by any means of ideas or doctrines that deny or justify the crimes in the previous section of this article or tries the rehabilitation of regimes or institutions which they protect generating practices of such will be punished with a prison sentence of one to two years 81 Switzerland edit Holocaust denial is not expressly illegal in Switzerland but the denial of genocide and other crimes against humanity is an imprisonable offence Art 261bis 1Racial discriminationWhoever publicly by word writing image gesture acts of violence or any other manner demeans or discriminates against an individual or a group of individuals because of their race their ethnicity or their religion in a way which undermines human dignity or on those bases denies coarsely minimizes or seeks to justify a genocide or other crimes against humanity shall be punished with up to three years imprisonment or a fine 82 Ukraine edit In September 2021 the Verkhovna Rada passed a law defining antisemitism and banning it in the country This law includes denying the mass extermination of Jews in the Holocaust as part of its definition of antisemitism 83 When committed by an individual is punishable by a fine or a prison sentence of up to five years Public officials would also be fined or imprisoned for up to five years and banned from holding certain offices for up to three years United Kingdom edit There is no statute in the United Kingdom making Holocaust denial illegal however judicial notice that the Holocaust occurred was taken in the case of R v Chabloz and the defendant in that case was charged with sharing grossly offensive material related to Holocaust denial Some contend that this judgement sets a precedent for Holocaust denial related material being deemed grossly offensive and contrary to the Communications Act 2003 84 United States edit In the United States Holocaust denial is constitutionally protected free speech because of the First Amendment 85 A United States court in 1981 in a case brought by Mel Mermelstein took judicial notice of the occurrence of gassings in Auschwitz during the Holocaust declaring that a legally incontestable fact 86 87 European Union edit The European Union s Executive Commission proposed a European Union wide anti racism xenophobia law in 2001 which included the criminalization of Holocaust denial On 15 July 1996 the Council of the European Union adopted the Joint action 96 443 JHA concerning action to combat racism and xenophobia 88 89 During the German presidency there was an attempt to extend this ban 90 Full implementation was blocked by the United Kingdom and the Nordic countries because of the need to balance the restrictions on voicing racist opinions against the freedom of expression 91 As a result a compromise has been reached within the EU and while the EU has not prohibited Holocaust denial outright a maximum term of three years in jail is optionally available to all member nations for denying or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide crimes against humanity and war crimes 92 93 The EU extradition policy regarding Holocaust denial was tested in the UK during the 2008 failed extradition case brought against the suspected Holocaust denier Fredrick Toben 94 by the German government As there is no specific crime of Holocaust denial in the UK the German government had applied for Toben s extradition for racial and xenophobic crimes Toben s extradition was refused by the Westminster Magistrates Court and the German government withdrew its appeal to the High Court European Union Framework Decision for Combating Racism and Xenophobia 2007 The text establishes that the following intentional conduct will be punishable in all EU Member States Publicly inciting to violence or hatred even by dissemination or distribution of tracts pictures or other material 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 Publicly condoning denying or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide crimes against humanity and war crimes as defined in the Statute of the International Criminal Court Articles 6 7 and 8 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 and dd crimes defined by the Tribunal of Nuremberg Article 6 of the Charter of the International Military Tribunal London Agreement of 1945 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 dd Member States may choose to punish only conduct which is either carried out in a manner likely to disturb public order or which is threatening abusive or insulting The reference to religion is intended to cover at least conduct which is a pretext for directing acts against a group of persons or a member of such a group defined by reference to race colour descent or national or ethnic origin Member States will ensure that these conducts are punishable by criminal penalties of a maximum of at least between 1 and 3 years of imprisonment 95 2019 European Court of Human Rights decision edit On 3 October 2019 in the case Pastors v Germany application no 55225 14 96 the European Court of Human Rights ECHR unanimously ruled that a decision of the German courts determining that the statement made by the German politician Udo Pastors that the so called Holocaust is being used for political and commercial purposes as well as other Holocaust denial comments were a violation of the memory of the dead and an intentional defamation of the Jewish people and that the courts had not violated Article 10 freedom of expression of the European Convention on Human Rights in convicting him for this offense Furthermore the ECHR decided by four votes to three that there had been no violation of Article 6 1 right to a fair trial of the European Convention on Human Rights 97 Prosecutions and convictions editLaws against Holocaust denial have been enforced in most jurisdictions that have them Convictions and sentencings include Date Name Country where the sentence was pronounced SentenceSeptember 1987 June 1999 April 2016 Jean Marie Le Pen France Germany fines of 183 000 1987 6 000 1999 98 and 30 000 2016 99 27 February 1998 Roger Garaudy France 6 months imprisonment suspended 240 000 37 500 fine 100 21 July 1998 Jurgen Graf Switzerland 15 months imprisonment fled Switzerland to avoid sentence 101 21 July 1998 Gerhard Forster Switzerland 12 months imprisonment disgorgement 102 8 April 1999 Fredrick Toben Australia 7 months imprisonment Mannheim Germany retrial 2011 indefinitely stayed by judge Dr Meinerzhagen 1 October 19 November 2008 London extradition to Mannheim Germany on European Arrest Warrant issued by Germany failed 15 August 12 November 2009 Adelaide Australia for contempt of court because he refused to stop questioning the Holocaust s 3 basics 6 million systematic state extermination gas chambers as murder weapon 27 May 1999 Jean Plantin France 6 months imprisonment suspended fine damages 103 11 April 2000 Gaston Armand Amaudruz Switzerland 1 year s imprisonment damages 104 20 February 2006 David Irving Austria 3 years imprisonment 105 Released and deported after serving 13 months 15 March 2006 Germar Rudolf Germany 21 2 years imprisonment 106 3 October 2006 Robert Faurisson France 7 500 fine 3 months probation 107 15 February 2007 Ernst Zundel Germany 5 years imprisonment 108 8 November 2007 Vincent Reynouard France 1 year s imprisonment and a fine of 10 000 euros 109 14 January 2008 Wolfgang Frohlich Austria 6 years imprisonment third offence 110 15 January 2008 Sylvia Stolz Germany 31 2 years imprisonment 111 11 March 2009 Horst Mahler Germany 5 years imprisonment 112 27 October 2009 Richard Williamson Germany 12 000 fine 113 later overturned citation needed 16 August 2012 Udo Pastors Germany 8 month imprisonment suspended on probation 114 31 January 2013 Gyorgy Nagy Hungary 18 month suspended jail sentence 115 11 February 2015 Vincent Reynouard France 2 years imprisonment 116 12 November 2015 Ursula Haverbeck Germany 10 months imprisonment 117 26 October 2018 Alfred Schaefer Germany 3 years and 2 months imprisonment 118 119 26 October 2018 Monika Schaefer Germany 10 months time served 118 119 4 February 2021 Vasile Zărnescu Romania 13 months imprisonment 120 31 March 2022 Philip Hassler Mr Bond Austria 10 years imprisonment 121 See also edit nbsp Law portalAnti BDS laws Anti fascism Armenian genocide denial Legality Criticism of Holocaust denial Freedom of expression Genocide recognition politics Rwandan genocide denial which is illegal in Rwanda 122 Secondary antisemitism ThoughtcrimeNotes edit nbsp Austria nbsp Belgium nbsp Czech Republic nbsp France nbsp Germany nbsp Greece nbsp Hungary nbsp Italy nbsp Lithuania nbsp Luxembourg nbsp Poland nbsp Portugal nbsp Romania nbsp Russia nbsp Slovakia nbsp Switzerland nbsp UkraineReferences edit D D Guttenplan Should Freedom of Speech Stop at Holocaust Denial Archived 15 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine Index of Free Expression 2005 Whine Michael Spring 2008 Expanding Holocaust Denial and Legislation Against It Jewish Political Studies Review Janos Kis Szolassabadsag es naci beszed Nepszabadsag 30 March 1996 Fogadatlan prokatorok A gardaitelet felreertelmezeseirol Archived 11 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine Magyar Narancs 23 July 2009 Alkotmanybirosag Kezdolap PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 April 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2016 X v Federal Republic of Germany European Commission of Human Rights 16 July 1982 Lehideux and Isorni v France 1998 VII no 92 application number 24662 94 case number 55 1997 839 1045 European Court of Human Rights 23 September 1998 Faurisson v France 2 BHRC UN Doc CCPR C 58 D 550 1993 1 United Nations Human Rights Committee 1996 Is There a New Anti Semitism A Conversation with Raul Hilberg Logos 6 1 2 Winter Spring 2007 Archived from the original on 7 June 2007 Retrieved 30 July 2012 I have come to the conclusion not once but several times that as far as I am concerned I do not agree with legislation that makes it illegal to utter pronouncements claiming that there was no Holocaust I do not want to muzzle any of this because it is a sign of weakness not of strength when you try to shut somebody up Garton Ash Timothy 19 October 2006 This is the moment for Europe to dismantle taboos not erect them The Guardian London Retrieved 30 July 2012 Singer Peter 1 March 2006 David Irving has a right to free speech too JPost com Retrieved 30 July 2012 Chomsky Noam 28 February 1981 His Right to Say It The Nation Archived from the original on 10 October 2014 Retrieved 30 July 2012 I t is elementary that freedom of expression including academic freedom is not to be restricted to views of which one approves and that it is precisely in the case of views that are almost universally despised and condemned that this right must be most vigorously defended Chomsky Noam His Right to Say It Noam Chomsky website Retrieved 16 February 2015 Chotiner Isaac January 24 2019 Looking at Anti Semitism on the Left and the Right An Interview with Deborah E Lipstadt The New Yorker Adam Lebor 25 March 2010 A bad law against Holocaust denial Jewish Chronicle Ben Collins 26 March 2014 George Brandis Holocaust Denial Would Not Become Legal Under My New Laws Business Insider Australia Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Racial Discrimination Act changes would allow Holocaust denial says Shane Rattenbury The Age 5 May 2014 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Holocaust denier Fredrick Toben jailed in Australia The Daily Telegraph London 14 August 2009 Retrieved 28 July 2020 Verbotsgesetz 1945 in der Fassung des NSG 1947 in German Austrian Research Centre for Post War Trials Retrieved 29 May 2009 Verfassungsgesetz vom 8 Mai 1945 uber das Verbot der NSDAP Verbotsgesetz 1947 in der Fassung der Verbotsgesetznovelle 1992 in German Austrian Research Centre for Post War Trials Retrieved 29 May 2009 23 MARS 1995 Loi tendant a reprimer la negation la minimisation la justification ou l approbation du genocide commis par le regime national socialiste allemand pendant la seconde guerre mondiale in French juridat be Retrieved 29 May 2009 PORICANJE GENOCIDA PROGLASITI KRIVICNIM DJELOM Prof dr Fikret Karcic Preporod 5 7 2007 Archived from the original on 19 September 2009 24sata info Stranka za BiH Krivicnim zakonom BiH obuhvatiti genocid i holokaust Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Dzidic Denis 27 January 2009 Bosnia s Etnic Tensions Delay Holocaust Denial Law Balkan Investigative Reporting Network Archived from the original on 16 September 2009 Retrieved 28 June 2016 HR s Decision on Enacting the Law on Amendment to the Criminal Code of Bosnia and Herzegovina Office of the High Representative 23 July 2021 Retrieved 23 July 2021 E proibido se dizer nazista ou negar Holocausto no Brasil O que dizem leis e especialistas Is it forbidden to call oneself Nazi or deny the Holocaust in Brazil What laws and experts say BBC Brasil in Portuguese 11 February 2022 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Criminal Code translation in English published by the Ministry of Labor and Social Policies Criminal Code in Bulgarian from the Ministry of Justice website Cohen Almagor Raphael 1 January 2013 Freedom of Expression v Social Responsibility Holocaust Denial in Canada Journal of Mass Media Ethics 28 1 42 56 doi 10 1080 08900523 2012 746119 ISSN 0890 0523 S2CID 144181623 Bazyler Michael 2008 2009 Holocaust Denial Laws and Other Legislation Criminalizing Promotion of Nazism PDF ihgjlm com Archived PDF from the original on 3 August 2021 Retrieved 9 April 2022 KamloopsBCNow Holocaust denial to be made a crime in Canada KamloopsBCNow Retrieved 9 April 2022 Holocaust denial and downplaying Nazis murder of Jews to be outlawed torontosun Retrieved 9 April 2022 C 19 44 1 LEGISinfo Parliament of Canada www parl ca a b c Criminal Code R S C 1985 c C 46 section 319 Justice Laws Website Retrieved 4 December 2022 An Act to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on April 7 2022 and other measures Retrieved 4 December 2022 Naamat Talis Osin Nina and Porat Dina eds 2012 Legislating for Equality A Multinational Collection of Non Discrimination Norms Volume I Europe Martinus Nijhoff Publishers pp 117 120 ISBN 9789004227590 Communication No 550 1993 France 16 12 96 CCPR C 58 D 550 1993 Jurisprudence United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Retrieved 29 May 2009 ECHR Marais c France n 31159 96 25 June 1996 Garaudy v France No 65831 01 24 June 2003 Liberation La loi contre la negation du genocide armenien est censuree 1 Archived 11 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Constitutional Council Decision no 2012 647 DC of 28 FEBRUARY 2012 Decision n 2015 512 QPC du 8 janvier 2016 Conseil constitutionnel www conseil constitutionnel fr Loi n 90 615 du 13 juillet 1990 tendant a reprimer tout acte raciste antisemite ou xenophobe in French Legifrance Retrieved 29 May 2009 Timmermann Wibke K 2014 Incitement in International Law Abingdon Oxon England Routledge p 139 ISBN 9781138020801 Shoshan Nitzan 2008 Reclaiming Germany Young Right Extremists the Return of the Nation and the State of Politics on the Streets of East Berlin vol 1 Chicago Illinois The University of Chicago p 183 ISBN 9780549931096 permanent dead link a b c d Bohlander Michael 1998 Bundesministerium der Justiz und fur Verbraucherschutz GERMAN CRIMINAL CODE Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection GERMAN CRIMINAL CODE Federal Ministry of Justice Germany para 130 a b c d Bundesministerium der Justiz und fur Verbraucherschutz Strafgesetzbuch Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection Criminal Code in German Federal Ministry of Justice Germany para 130 6 Volkermord in German Federal Ministry of Justice Retrieved 29 May 2009 189 Verunglimpfung des Andenkens Verstorbener in German Bundesministerium der Justiz Retrieved 26 June 2016 194 Strafantrag in German Bundesministerium der Justiz Retrieved 29 May 2009 Pichent Michelle L 2003 A Fertile ground The Expansion of Holocaust Denial into the Arab World Boston College Third World Law Review v 23 n 4 Greece Passes Bill Making Holocaust Denial Illegal Tougher Anti Racism Laws Website Reuters 9 September 2014 Retrieved 20 June 2016 Article 2 Law 927 1979 16 March 2015 Historians against Article 2 of anti racist law 2 September 2014 German historian Heinz Richter acquitted regarding his book on the battle of Crete 10 February 2016 Professor Richter not guilty Rhetoric of hate and racist speech in Greece 11 March 2018 Hungary criminalises holocaust denial The Independent Associated Press 23 February 2010 Retrieved 6 April 2016 President Solyom signs Holocaust denial bill Archived 10 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine politics hu Fidesz szigor a Btk ban borton a kommunista bunok tagadasaert nol hu NOL 21 May 2010 Bennettsmith Meredith 2 February 2013 Hungary Criminalizes Holocaust Denial Orders Man To Visit Memorial Huffington Post A Kuruc info cikke az elso amit betiltottak Magyarorszagon ORIGO 14 January 2015 Jogsegelyt kinal a TASZ a Kuruc info nak ORIGO 15 January 2015 Jogsegelyt ajanl a Kuruc infonak a TASZ nem kerunk belole Kuruc info 15 January 2015 Denial of Holocaust Prohibition Law 5746 1986 Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs Retrieved 30 May 2009 JTA 10 June 2016 Italy s parliament approves bill criminalizing Holocaust denial The Times of Israel Retrieved 13 September 2018 Gazzetta Ufficiale www gazzettaufficiale it Liechtensteinisches Landesgesetzblatt in German LLV Government Portal Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 31 May 2009 LIETUVOS RESPUBLIKOS BAUDZIAMASIS KODEKSAS in Lithuanian Retrieved 22 January 2012 a b c LUXEMBOURG National Legal Measures Council of Europe Retrieved 31 May 2009 Denying holocaust not a crime VVD DutchNews nl 27 May 2009 Retrieved 31 May 2009 Dutch Liberal leader Holocaust Denial should Not be Crime tripolipost com 29 May 2009 Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 31 May 2009 Wetboek van Strafrecht Sr Artikel 137c in Dutch www wetboek online nl Retrieved 31 May 2009 Wetboek van Strafrecht Sr Artikel 137d in Dutch www wetboek online nl Retrieved 31 May 2009 in English old Act of 18 December 1998 on the Institute of National Remembrance Commission for Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation Archived 20 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Institute of National Remembrance Retrieved 31 May 2009 in Polish Ustawa z dnia 18 grudnia 1998 r o Instytucie Pamieci Narodowej Komisji Scigania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Sejm of the Republic of Poland click tekst ujednolicony to see act Retrieved 31 May 2009 Codigo Penal portugues texto oficial PDF in Portuguese Diario da Republica 4 September 2007 pp 57 58 Retrieved 31 May 2009 ORDONANTA DE URGENTA nr 31 din 13 martie 2002 PDF in Romanian Romanian Government Department for Interethnic Relations Archived from the original PDF on 28 November 2009 Retrieved 31 May 2009 Marica Irina 5 February 2021 Bucharest court rules first sentence for Holocaust denial in Romania Romania Insider Holocaust Deniers in Russia Now Face Five Years in Prison Reuters Website Reuters 5 May 2014 Retrieved 20 June 2016 Tribunal Constitucional Constitutional Court of Spain 7 November 2007 Archived from the original on 20 January 2012 Retrieved 19 February 2012 Uni Assaf 10 November 2007 Spanish court rules out jail sentences for Holocaust denial Haaretz Archived from the original on 17 September 2008 Retrieved 1 June 2009 Codigo Penal in Spanish juridicas com Retrieved 8 January 2015 SR 311 0 Art 261bis Rassendiskriminierung Schweizerisches Strafgesetzbuch in German Swiss Confederation Retrieved 1 June 2009 Ukraine s Parliament Passes Bill Banning Anti Semitism RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty 22 September 2021 Retrieved 15 March 2022 Alison Chabloz has anti Semitic songs conviction upheld BBC News 13 February 2019 Kahn Robert A Holocaust Denial www mtsu edu Retrieved 14 June 2020 California Judge Rules Holocaust Did Happen The New York Times Associated Press 10 October 1981 p A26 Retrieved 20 November 2010 Mel Mermelstein v Institute for Historical Review 1981 Superior Court of Los Angeles County Joint action to combat racism and xenophobia Archived 11 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Europa eu 27 July 2005 Retrieved June 2007 31996F0443 Eur lex Europa eu 24 July 1996 Retrieved June 2007 Push for EU Holocaust denial ban BBC News 15 January 2007 Retrieved 15 November 2009 EU diplomats Ban on Holocaust denial won t curb civil liberties Haaretz 17 April 2004 Retrieved 15 November 2009 EU agrees new racial hatred law BBC News 19 April 2007 Retrieved 15 November 2009 Bilefsky Dan EU adopts measure outlawing Holocaust denial The New York Times 19 April 2007 Retrieved 15 November 2009 Suspected Holocaust denier Dr Gerald Toben wins extradition fight The Daily Telegraph London 29 October 2008 Retrieved 14 April 2008 EU Justice Ministers agree on racism and xenophobia proposal European Union United Nations 19 April 2007 Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 1 June 2009 Pastors v Germany European Court of Human Rights decided on 3 October 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2019 Holocaust denial is not protected by the European Convention on Human Rights European Court of Human Rights 3 October 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2019 Le Pen Convicted for Racial Hatred Associated Press 2 June 1999 Retrieved 14 November 2009 Le Pen fined over Holocaust remarks BBC BBC Retrieved 6 April 2016 Writer fined for Holocaust writings BBC News 27 February 1998 Retrieved 15 November 2009 Black Edwin Denial of Holocaust nothing new in Iran Ties to Hitler led to plots against British and Jews dead link San Francisco Chronicle 8 January 2006 Holocaust Revisionists Will Serve Time The Spokesman Review Associated Press 21 July 1998 Retrieved 15 November 2009 Francillon Claude A Lyon l editeur chomeur Jean Plantin juge pour contestation de crimes contre l humanite Le Monde 9 September 1999 Retrieved 15 November 2009 Holocaust revisionist sentenced BBC News 11 April 2000 Retrieved 15 November 2009 Traynor Ian Irving jailed for denying Holocaust The Guardian 21 February 2006 Retrieved 13 November 2009 German Holocaust Denier Imprisoned for Inciting Racial Hatred Deutsche Welle 16 March 2007 Retrieved 14 November 2009 Stalinsky Steven The Influence of a Man Who Denies the Holocaust Archived 23 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine New York Sun 12 October 2006 Retrieved 14 November 2009 Holocaust denier in Germany sentenced to five years in prison Europe International Herald Tribune The New York Times 15 February 2007 Retrieved 14 November 2009 Valerie Igounet Robert Faurisson Portrait d un negationniste Paris 2012 p 382 ISBN 978 2207259986 Austrian Holocaust denier gets six and a half years in prison Archived 7 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine European Jewish Press 14 January 2008 Retrieved 15 November 2009 German Neo Nazi Lawyer Sentenced for Denying Holocaust Deutsche Welle 14 January 2008 Retrieved 15 November 2009 Horst Mahler zu hoher Haftstrafe verurteilt Archived 14 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 11 March 2009 Retrieved 14 November 2009 German court tells holocaust denier he must face trial Deutsche Welle 10 November 2009 Retrieved 14 November 2009 European Court of Human Rights Holocaust Denial is Not Protected Free Speech European Court of Human Rights 3 October 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2019 Hungary orders Holocaust denier to visit Auschwitz The Jerusalem Post 3 February 2013 Retrieved 6 July 2013 Le negationniste Vincent Reynouard de nouveau condamne a la prison ferme Le Monde 11 February 2015 Retrieved 15 February 2015 Amtsgericht Hamburg 87 jahrige Holocaust Leugnerin zu zehn Monaten Haft verurteilt Der Spiegel 12 November 2015 Retrieved 12 November 2015 a b International Radio Canada 31 October 2018 Update Canadian couple convicted in Germany for hate RCI English Retrieved 20 April 2023 a b Alberta Holocaust denier convicted in Germany for incitement to hatred CBC 26 October 2018 Vasile Zărnescu former SRI colonel escapes with a warning for denying the Holocaust after the judges accepted his appeal In the first instance Zărnescu was sentenced to 13 months in prison with a suspended sentence G4 Media 31 March 2022 Retrieved 15 June 2023 Free Mr Bond Interview with Team FreeMrBond counter currents 18 January 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Mchangama Jacob 2 October 2016 First They Came for the Holocaust Deniers and I Did Not Speak Out Foreign Policy External links editJonathan Josephs Holocaust Denial Legislation A justifiable infringement of freedom of speech Archived 24 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine Universite Libre de Bruxelles Working Papers du Centre Perelman de philosophie du droit n 2008 3 Voices on Antisemitism Interview with Brigitte Zypries from the U S Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Legality of Holocaust denial amp oldid 1217457609 France, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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