EN FRANCE : INTERDIT DE CRITIQUER L'ISLAM : C'EST "BLASPHEMATOIRE" !
French Islamists seek to use blasphemy law to silence critics
Posted: Tue, 18 Feb 2014
French Islamists are suing the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo for blasphemy after it published a front cover carrying the slogan "The Koran is crap, it doesn't stop bullets".
Taking
advantage of the existence of the crime of "blasphemy" uniquely
available in the Alsace-Moselle region - it no longer exists in the rest
of French common law – The League of Judicial Defence of Muslims
(LDJM), led by the former lawyer Karim Achoui, has brought the case
against Charlie Hebdo to the Criminal Court in Alsace-Moselle's capital, Strasbourg. The hearing is set for 7 April.
Alsace-Moselle was annexed by Germany in 1871 and 1940-45 and retained part of the old German code when it returned to France.
One
complication is that the Alsatian blasphemy law does not recognise
Islam, covering only Catholicism, three forms of Protestantism and
Judaism. This test case will decide whether the law can be widened to
include Islam.
In the rest of France the crime of
blasphemy has not existed since the Revolution. It was removed from the
French law by Articles 10 and 11 of the Declaration of Human Rights and
the Citizen of 1789, before being reinstated under the Restoration and
again permanently deleted by the law of 29 July 1881 on freedom of the
press. From the point of view of French common law, a caricature, even
one perceived as 'disrespectful', cannot be blasphemous.
But
France does have racial and religious hatred laws that are intended to
protect only individuals. French courts will consider cases that cause
"injury, personal and direct attack against a group of people because of
their religious affiliation" or incitement to racial or religious
hatred in cases involving defamation of individuals. "The distinction
may seem subtle, but it is fundamental, it is the citizen that the
republic protects, not belief" says Hubert Lesaffre, doctor of public
law, in an article published by Liberation newspaper.
Undeterred by the absence of a blasphemy law in the rest of France, the LDJM is also trying to prosecute Charlie Hebdo
in a Paris court for "provocation and incitement to hatred on the basis
of religious affiliation and insult". The Tribunal of First Instance in
Paris will decide whether the case can proceed.
Article 166 of the Alsace -Moselle penal code - inherited from the German legislation - relating to blasphemy states:
"He who causes a scandal by publicly blaspheming against God by disparaging or publicly insulting Christian cults or a religious community established in the territory of the Confederation and recognised as a corporation, or institutions or ceremonies of these cults or which, in a church or other place devoted to religious meetings, has committed offensive and outrageous acts, shall be punished with imprisonment of three years".
Eric Sander, Secretary General of the Institute of Alsace-Moselle, told Le Monde
newspaper that local law states that "any religion, statutory or
otherwise, can invoke Article 166 of the local penal code which is
independent of system of worship".
Asked in 2006
about whether the provisions of local Alsatian law "apply to all
religious beliefs or only to legally recognised religions", the Ministry
of the Interior had stated that "the implementation and determination
of the scope application of [Article 166], in particular as regards the
extension to non- recognised religions... is at the discretion of the
judge".
The last case brought under this law was in 1918.
Another
hearing has also been set for the 7 April, this time in the southern
town of Nîmes, in a case against former decentralisation minister Claude
Goasguen. He has been accused of "offending the honour and dignity of
the Muslim community", in the words of lawyer Khadija Aoudia, acting for
one of France's two major Muslim associations, the CFCM.
Mr
Goasguen, speaking at a gala organised by a pro-Israel group, KKL,
claimed that the history of the Holocaust could no longer be taught in
French schools "because people are so scared of the reaction of young
Muslims who have been drugged in the mosques".
Although
the event took place in Paris, it was broadcast on television and the
internet, thus allowing the CFCM's Abdallah Zekri to bring the case in
Nîmes where he lives.
Claiming that the "Muslim
community" is "always ready to denounce anti-Semitic acts", Aoudia said
that media coverage of Goasguen's remarks "feed Islamophobia and create a
strong feeling of rejection".
However, at a recent
"Day of Rage" demonstration in Paris –which brought together Catholic
fundamentalists, far-right groups and supporters of comedian Dieudonné,
some of whom are young Muslims – anti-Semitic slogans were chanted.
In
yet another case, Minister of the Interior Manuel Valls is targeted. A
petition has been filed with the Court of Justice of the Republic for
"provocation to discrimination and hatred".
The complaint is in response
to remarks made by the Minister 19 August 2013 in which he said "within
the next ten years, we need to demonstrate that Islam is compatible
with democracy".
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