TOKYO MASTER BANNER

MINISTRY OF TOKYO
US-ANGLO CAPITALISMEU-NATO IMPERIALISM
Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies
Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships
Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY
[LINK | Article]

*U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR*

Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
[info from Craig Murray video appearance, follows]  US-Anglo Alliance DELIBERATELY STOKING ANTI-RUSSIAN FEELING & RAMPING UP TENSION BETWEEN EASTERN EUROPE & RUSSIA.  British military/government feeding media PROPAGANDA.  Media choosing to PUBLISH government PROPAGANDA.  US naval aggression against Russia:  Baltic Sea — US naval aggression against China:  South China Sea.  Continued NATO pressure on Russia:  US missile systems moving into Eastern Europe.     [info from John Pilger interview follows]  War Hawk:  Hillary Clinton — embodiment of seamless aggressive American imperialist post-WWII system.  USA in frenzy of preparation for a conflict.  Greatest US-led build-up of forces since WWII gathered in Eastern Europe and in Baltic states.  US expansion & military preparation HAS NOT BEEN REPORTED IN THE WEST.  Since US paid for & controlled US coup, UKRAINE has become an American preserve and CIA Theme Park, on Russia's borderland, through which Germans invaded in the 1940s, costing 27 million Russian lives.  Imagine equivalent occurring on US borders in Canada or Mexico.  US military preparations against RUSSIA and against CHINA have NOT been reported by MEDIA.  US has sent guided missile ships to diputed zone in South China Sea.  DANGER OF US PRE-EMPTIVE NUCLEAR STRIKES.  China is on HIGH NUCLEAR ALERT.  US spy plane intercepted by Chinese fighter jets.  Public is primed to accept so-called 'aggressive' moves by China, when these are in fact defensive moves:  US 400 major bases encircling China; Okinawa has 32 American military installations; Japan has 130 American military bases in all.  WARNING PENTAGON MILITARY THINKING DOMINATES WASHINGTON. ⟴  
Showing posts with label Freedom of Expression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freedom of Expression. Show all posts

April 14, 2016

Germany: Freedom of Expression - Erdogan Insult 'Serious Crime Against Humanity'


Germany:  Freedom of Expression - Erdogan Insult 'Serious Crime Against Humanity'
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/04/12/could-this-poem-trip-up-angela-merkel/?tid=sm_tw

How a vulgar poem is giving Germany’s Merkel a real headache

By Rick Noack April 12 at 7:48 AM

It all started with a joke.



Last week, German comedian Jan Böhmermann aired a segment on his show in which he read an openly offensive poem, directed at Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in which he accused him of bestiality and other unsavory things.

The Turkish politician previously criticized a much less controversial satirical segment that aired on another German channel. But Böhmermann went too far for Erdogan. The Turkish president officially filed charges against the German comedian on Mondayusing a little-known German law.

But it could cost German Chancellor Angela Merkel her job, according to some commentators.

Respected German weekly Der Spiegel argued in its lead story Tuesday that Merkel — among the most powerful women in the world — "could stumble" over the scandal that started as a laugh. Merkel has survived far worse crises. So why is the Böhmermann controversy so dangerous to her office, according to German media?

Insulting a head of state is a criminal offense in Germany, and it's up to Merkel to decide whether Erdogan's case can be heard in German courts. And here's where it gets really complicated.

Merkel and the European Union recently negotiated a refugee deal with Turkey that arguably saved her chancellorship, and — for the moment, at least — greatly decreased the influx of refugees and migrants.

But Merkel has also made clear in the past that she strongly supports freedom of the press. Erdogan has been accused of shutting down newspapers and threatening journalists at home. By filing charges against Böhmermann, who works for one of the country's main public television stations, ZDF, Erdogan has taken his fight abroad.

He also puts Merkel into an awkward position. If she accepts Böhmermann to be charged for insulting Erdogan, critics will accuse her of sacrificing press freedom.

But if she refused to accept the charges Erdogan put forward, she could threaten German-Turkish relations at the worst possible time, when a crucial refugee deal is being implemented. If Turkey withdrew from the deal as a consequence, it would dash hopes of European nations of finding a way out of the migrant crisis.

"The whole country now watches, as Erdogan embarrasses the chancellor and parades her like in a circus ring," Der Spiegel commented Tuesday.

The current scandal is also considered a delayed consequence of Merkel's decision to allow hundreds of thousands of Syrians into the country last fall.

Her policies have made her so politically vulnerable that even a joke could now turn into a serious threat to her office — partially because Merkel has so far refused to clearly side with Böhmermann and those arguing that a potential trial is a threat to freedom of the press. The chancellor even called the comedian's poem "deliberately offending" — a comment that some interpreted as support for Erdogan.

"The scandal undermines her credibility and exposes her failed migration policies," German news channel n-tv said Tuesday.

Tensions have risen for days. On Monday, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said that the poem — which has since been deleted from ZDF's website — was not only an insult against Erdogan but against all Turks.

"That is why the Republic of Turkey demands that this impertinent man is immediately punished for insulting a president, within the scope of German law," Kurtulmus was quoted as saying. He went on to call the poem a "serious crime against humanity" that had "crossed all lines of indecency."

Böhmermann could face jail time or a fine if a German court found him guilty. Other prominent members of the public, including Mathias Döpfner, head of the country's influential Axel Springer publishing company, have already declared support for the comedian. Böhmermann has deliberately provoked the public in the past and might even have expected to face a trial.

For Merkel, though, his joke is starting to create real problems.

Also read:

A German comedian read a lewd poem about Turkey’s Erdogan. Now he could face jail time.

Rick Noack writes about foreign affairs and is based in Europe.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/04/12/could-this-poem-trip-up-angela-merkel/?tid=sm_tw


Zeit.de
German to English Translation
EXTRACTS

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has filed a criminal complaint against Jan Böhmermann. So the Mainz Prosecutors said on Monday evening , the complaint against the ZDF satirist received by them.
...
A criminal complaint will now be examined in addition to the already pending due to attack on the institutions and representatives of foreign states.
...
Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmuş said in the southeastern Turkish city of Sanliurfa, the poem is not only an insult of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, but from all 78 million Turks.
...  Kurtulmuş that Turkey would exert "absolutely no political pressure" in Germany. He threw Böhmermann before but having committed a "serious crime against humanity".  The poem had "exceeded all limits of shamelessness".  ...
...

The Turkish government refers, in calling on the paragraph 103 of the German Penal Code. It says: "Who is a foreign head of state (...) offended with imprisonment up to three years or fined, punished in case of defamatory libel with imprisonment from three months to five years." For a prosecution in such cases, it need in addition to the request for prosecution of Turkey, a corresponding authorization on the part of the federal government.

The party leader of the Greens demanded meanwhile, to delete the paragraph for insulting representatives of foreign states from the Criminal Code. A paragraph to "lese majeste" is no longer appropriate. It could not be, "that other countries judge how we interpret freedom of speech."

Received support Böhmermann also by former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis. The tweeted, Europe has lost in the refugee crisis his soul, now it lose its humor. His demand: "Hands off @janboehm".

    Europe first lost its soul (agreement with Turkey on refugees), now it is losing its humor. Hands off @janboehm ! Https://t.co/w6bTJjp0QG
   
    - Yanis Varoufakis (@yanisvaroufakis) April 11, 2016 


http://archive.is/l4fal


Defamation - German Criminal Penal Code

Section 103
Defamation of organs and representatives of foreign states

(1) Whosoever insults a foreign head of state, or, with respect to his position, a member of a foreign government who is in Germany in his official capacity, or a head of a foreign diplomatic mission who is accredited in the Federal territory shall be liable to imprisonment not exceeding three years or a fine, in case of a slanderous insult to imprisonment from three months to five years.

(2) If the offence was committed publicly, in a meeting or through the dissemination of written materials (section 11(3)) Section 200 shall apply. An application for publication of the conviction may also be filed by the prosecution service.

http://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_stgb/englisch_stgb.html#p1035



GERMAN CRIMINAL CODE

Translation of the German Criminal Code
provided by Prof. Dr. Michael Bohlander

http://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_stgb/index.html#gl_p0008

Criminal Code of 1871
-- appears to be the codification of:
    1.  Hohenzollern Empire penal code; and
    2.  Weimar Republic penal code.


http://www.dmlp.org/blog/2012/l%C3%A8se-majest%C3%A9-16th-century-censorship-meets-21st-century-law

Lèse Majesté: 16th Century Censorship Meets 21st Century Law


Posted July 12th, 2012 by Marie-Andree Weiss




When hearing the expression “lèse majesté,” images of the Queen of Hearts ordering heads to be chopped off ASAP may come to mind. Marie-Antoinette, the queen who was once a “majesté” in France, herself lost her head during the French Revolution. Surely, the crime of lèse majesté is now a thing of the past?

Lèse Majesté Law is Heavily Enforced in Thailand

Not quite, as some monarchies still prosecute this crime. Several of the European monarchies still have lèse-majesté laws, including Norway, where prosecuting the crime can only be carried out by the king or with his consent.

Thailand, a constitutional monarchy, has had a lèse-majesté law since 1908, the year of the enactment of its first criminal code. Although the political powers of the king (currently King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who has reigned since 1946) are limited, the monarchy is held in high regard.  A clause in the Thai constitution states that "The King shall be enthroned in a position of revered worship and shall not be violated. No person shall expose the King to any sort of accusation or action." Article 112 of the Thai Criminal Code states that "Whoever defames, insults or threatens the King, the Queen, the Heir-apparent or the Regent, shall be punished with imprisonment of three to 15 years." The code does not define, however, what constitutes a defamation or an insult.

Thailand has been enforcing its lèse majesté law quite aggressively lately. It seems that the law has been used by Thailand prosecutors to suppress political speech critical of the monarchy, particularly speech by partisans of former Prime Miniter Thakshin Shinawatra, who are known as the "Red Shirts." In September 2006, a military coup d’état deseated Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and dissolved the Parliament. Since 2009, the Thailand public prosecutor has filed 12 lèse majesté suits against the Red Shirts, or persons suspected of supporting them.

For instance, Ampon Tangnoppakul was sentenced last November to 20 years in prison by a Thai Court, for having sent four text messages to a government official criticizing Thailand’s royal family. He claimed that he never sent these messages, and that he does not even know how to send text messages. Mr. Tangnoppakul died last May while serving his sentence.

He was not the only person incriminated of lèse-majesté in Thailand. Surachai Danwattananusorn, who has criticized the 2006 coup d’état, was sentenced in February 2012 to seven and a half years of prison for having insulted the monarchy.

Journalists and bloggers are also feeling the heat. The editor of a Thai political website was sentenced in 2012 to a eight-month suspended sentence because she had not removed comments believed to be insulting to the monarchy, an offense under section 15 of the Thai Computer Crime Act.

Impact of the Thai law on Foreigners

It has been argued that Facebook could be prosecuted in Thailand under its Computer Crime Act if one of its users posts derogatory comments about the Thai government or the Thai king.

Section 17(2) of the 2007 Thai Computer Crime Act indeed provides that a person committing an offense under the Act is publishable in Thailand, if the injured party is the Thai government or a Thai. Also, section 14(3) of the Act criminalizes imputing data in a system (posting on a blog is imputing data) which is the commission of the offense relating to national security according to the criminal code. Lèse majesté is criminalized by the criminal code.

Thai censorship is also felt abroad. Google revealed in its last Transparency Report that it received four requests from Thailand’s Ministry of Information, Communication and Technology to remove 149 YouTube videos. These videos were allegedly insulting to the monarchy and thus violated Thailand's lèse-majesté law. Google stated that it had restricted 70 percent of these videos from view in Thailand in accordance with Thai law.

Oui, Lèse Majesté is Still a Crime in France

Lèse majesté does not necessarily refer solely to insulting a monarch. “Majestas” was defined by Ulpian, a Roman jurist, as "crimen illud quod adversus Populum Romanum vel adversus securitatem ejus committitur" – that is, the crime committed against the Roman people or against its security. “Majestas” referred to the Roman state as a whole, and this, as early as the Roman Republic, before Rome became an empire.

Interestingly, some republics criminalize lèse majesté. One of these is France. The French law on the freedom of the press, first enacted on July 29, 1881 (French Press Law), is still in force after many amendments, and now regulates all media, including blog postings.

Its article 26 criminalizes offending the president of the republic by “speech, shouts, threats uttered in public places or during public meetings, or by writings, printed materials, drawings, engravings, paintings, emblems, images or any other medium of written words, spoken words, or images sold, distributed, or displayed in public places or public meetings or by any way of electronic communication to the public.” It is a felony punishable by up to a 45,000 euro fine.

The law was used in 2008 by then-President Nicolas Sarkozy, in a case that stirred much emotion in France, Hervé Eon, a French citizen, was arrested in August 2008 as he was standing on the side of a road holding a placard card which read “casse toi pauv’ con“ (“get lost you a$$...”). Mr. Eon was quoting the insult uttered by Mr. Sarkozy himself at a disgruntled voter during his visit at the Paris agricultural fair a few months earlier, an exchange captured on a video which quickly became viral. Eon was tried for having offended the French president, under article 26 of the French Press Law. The criminal court found him guilty, and fined him a suspended sentence of 30 Euros. A court of appeals confirmed the judgment. Eon then announced his intention to file a complaint with the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, but it does not seem he followed up on that intent.

[Ed. note (4/3/2013) -- It turns out that Eon did in fact file a complaint with the ECHR; see Marie-Andrée's coverage of the ECHR's ruling in the case here.]

Insulting Guests is Bad Manners, and also Carries a Prison Term if They Are Foreign Heads of State

One can regret that Eon did not file suit, as France abolished another article of the French Press Law, article 36, which criminalized insulting a foreign head of state, a foreign head of government, or the minister for foreign affairs of a foreign government, following a 2002 ruling by the European Court of Human Rights against France, Colombani and others against France. In that case, the director of publication and a journalist of Le Monde had been convicted by the Paris Court of Appeal for defamation of then-king of Morocco, Hassan II. The short article stated that the king’s entourage was implicated by a confidential report on drug trafficking in Morocco. The Court of Appeal found that the journalists had not published these facts in good faith, and that the publication was “tainted with malicious intent.”

The European Court of Human Rights noted (§56) that a politician “is certainly entitled to have his reputation protected, even when he is not acting in his private capacity, but the requirements of that protection have to be weighed against the interests of open discussion of political issues, since exceptions to freedom of expression must be interpreted narrowly.”

However, the Court found that the conviction of the journalists by the French courts “incontestably amounted to an interference with the applicants' exercise of their right to freedom of expression” as guaranteed by article 10 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. The case was a victory for journalists and bloggers, as the offense was punishable at the time by one year of imprisonment or a 300,000 francs fine (more or less $60,000), quite a hefty sum.

Germany, also a signatory of the European Human Rights Convention, as is every member state of the European Union, has not taken stock of the Colombani case. Paragraph 103 of the German Federal Criminal Code still criminalizes insulting a foreign head of state, the representative of a foreign state, or the head of a diplomatic mission, § 103 StGB:

    Any person who offends , by reference to their position, a foreign head of state, a member of a foreign government, or the leader of a foreign diplomatic mission, acting in their official capacity, while being present within the Federal Republic of Germany or within a Federal Territory, will be punished by imprisonment up to three years or a fine. If the offence is defamation, the penalty will be imprisonment from three months to five years.

Are Changes Ahead?

No changes seem to be ahead in Thailand. In France, several French representatives in May 2012 sponsored a bill aiming at suppressing article 26 of the French Press Law. In the bill’s explanatory memorandum, the representatives stated that article 26 was “akin to an incongruous relic of the old Regime lèse-majesté, repealed from the Criminal Code in 1830.” The representatives argued that at the time of the enactment of the French Press Law, during the Third Republic, the president merely played the role of an arbitrator. He was not elected by direct universal suffrage, and was thus above partisan political debates. However, the French president has been elected by direct universal suffrage since 1962. Criminalizing offenses to such a very active participant in the democratic debate is thus not appropriate in a democracy, according to the sponsors of the bill. The bill was not enacted.

France recently changed majority. The Senate and the House are now held by a socialist majority, and François Hollande, a socialist, was elected president in May. It remains to be seen if a bill will again be presented to abolish article 26 of the French Press Law.

In the meantime, insulting the king of Thailand or the president of France on a blog still carries a risk of prosecution.  However, though France or say, Norway, may chose to enforce their laws if one of their own nationals is the author of a lèse majesté crime, it is very unlikely that they would ever ask a foreign content provider to remove content offensive to the head of state, or would prosecute a foreigner, as Thailand does. As the French say, it is best to wash ones’ dirty laundry at home.

Marie-Andrée Weiss is a solo attorney admitted in New York, and her admission is pending in France. Her practice focuses on intellectual property, privacy, and social media law. She frequently writes on these topics and on European Union law.

http://www.dmlp.org/blog/2012/l%C3%A8se-majest%C3%A9-16th-century-censorship-meets-21st-century-law


---------------------- ----------------------

COMMENT

Sarkozy is such a creep.  What a nasty rat.

I'm not too keen on that Yanis Varoufakis economist / statistician, either.  He's such a shill for neocon globalist agenda.

Erdogan is positively despicable.  Europe, take back Anatolia.  LOL

European laws are ridiculous. 
Look at the way all these laws can be misused.
Merkel needs to tell Erdogan to get stuffed:  the German law's incompatible with article 10 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (*freedom of expression*).



March 16, 2015

Denmark - Lars Vilks, artist Sweden, receives award for promoting free speech

LARS VILKS



Free Press Society
Denmark
Lars Vilks, artist Sweden, receives award from Danish association promoting free speech,  Trykkefrihedsselskabet ('Press Freedom Society' - a more direct translation?)
http://www.thelocal.se/20150315/cartoonist-lars-vilks-in-first-public-appearance-since-copenhagen-attacks

Trykkefrihedsselskabet assoc. prior free speech awards to:
  • >Kurt Westergaard cartoonist
  • >editor Flemming Rose, Jyllands-Posten
trykkefrihed = trykke frihed = press freedom
known as:   Free Press Society
f. 2004 in Denmark
"Without freedom of speech, no free society."
Article caught my eye, as I knew that Lars Vilks has been in hiding for years, under police protection in Sweden, which struck me as an absolutely insane way for him to have to live  ...

 ... and I think he was also the target of the recent Copenhagen attack (yes, it sure looks like it - or the event was).

More on Lars Vilks - here.
The Wikipedia entry on Vilks discusses the Copenhagen attack in the most recent subsection, going into detail about the Copenhagen cafe event arrangements and who attended.

However, while the entry (which contains an overhead link to a separate entry on the Copenhagen attack) states that gunman (who killed 'one civilian' and wounded three policemen), was subsequently killed by police, the Vilks entry has left out shocking and important details relevant to Vilks and the Copenhagen attack, by not plainly stating that the following took place:
Film director Finn Noergaard, 55, was killed yesterday at a cafe. Hours later, security employee Dan Uzan, 37, was shot in the head as he stood outside a building belonging to the city's Great Synagogue. [1]
The gunman, Omar El-Hussein, later shot dead a Jewish man outside a synagogue before he was killed by police. [2]
Seriously, how hard is it (a) name the gunman and (b) key in the names of the two dead victims?
Maybe less focus on who organised and attended a cafe event and a bit more attention paid to the people that were murdered would have made for a more sensible entry on the subject of the Vilks Copenhagen attack subsection, irrespective of the overhead link-to provision in the entry.
It's not as if the relevant information wasn't available, as the citation link is to the Daily Mail article which contains names.

When key points are left out of entries, I think it damages confidence in the source (Wikipedia) and makes for an inferior information repository, even if there is links to other sections.  It just looks really shifty excluding information that is key and information that has a lot of impact.
More on the Vilks latest event:
Israel National News:

Cartoonist Makes First Public Appearance Since Copenhagen Attack

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/192608





January 30, 2015

Canada - Blasphemy

CANADA

Why Is Blasphemy Still Illegal in Canada?
January 20, 2015

By Shanifa Nasser

Section 296 of the Criminal Code of Canada states: "Every one who publishes a blasphemous libel is guilty of an indictable offense and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years." True, no one has been prosecuted under the law in more than 70 years; charges against the Canadian distributor of the Monty Python film Life of Brian in 1980, for example, were later dropped. But secular advocacy groups say it's plainly hypocritical for Canada to keep an anti-blasphemy law on the books when it accuses other countries of using similar laws to justify human rights abuses. The United Kingdom abolished its blasphemy law in 2008; the United States has never had one at the federal level. Meanwhile, Canada's law has expanded in application beyond Christianity to religion in general.

Last month, the heads of Humanist Canada and the Centre for Inquiry (CFI), a national organization that promotes "skeptical, secular, rational, and humanistic inquiry," met with Ambassador Andrew Bennett of Canada's Office of Religious Freedom to note the inconsistency of the law with his office's policy of supporting religious freedom abroad. But Bennett's mandate doesn't include domestic issues. So the two groups, with the support of lawyers, are now taking their case to the Department of Justice.

"There are certain parts of the world where apostasy will get your head removed. We don't have that issue here but why would we even have this on our books?" said Eric Thomas, president of Humanist Canada.

[ ... ]

 Lawyer Derek James From of the Canadian Constitution Foundation argues that while it's unlikely anyone would be charged with blasphemy in Canada, the very existence of the law is a violation of our freedom of expression. He says the law was considered dead in the UK, too, until it resurfaced in 1977. It's therefore not dead, but dormant, he says.

Willoughby agrees. "If it is truly a dead and unused law, then let us bury it."
EXTRACT ONLY - FULL @ SOURCE
http://www.vice.com/read/blasphemy-in-canada-217

COMMENT

What kind of demented government would even have an 'Office of Religious Freedom'?

The guy from Canadian Constitution Foundation has a point about that ridiculous blasphemy law. 


LINKS

Canadian Constitution Foundation


July 24, 2014

UK - SILENCES POLITICAL DISSENT


DAVID WARD:   Careful ... That mug he's holding may be a 'weapon of mass destruction'!


David Ward, a Liberal Democrat MP

 TWITTER

The big question is - if I lived in #Gaza would I fire a rocket? - probably yes

— David Ward (@DavidWardMP) July 22, 2014

[HERE]


Some old guy in UK politics tweets, expressing his opinion or his emotions on some trivial communications medium -- and political opportunists immediately jump on this to grandstand about a supposed 'incitement to violence'.

Oh, let's behave as if this puny old man or his twitter followers are armed to the teeth and represent a 'terrorist' threat, while we all deny who is being terrorised at present.

Conservative MP Nadhim Zahawi has written to Metropolitan Police, calling for an investigation into Mr Ward’s actions “as a matter of urgency.”
 
The remarks were immediately condemned by other MPs, including the Conservative party chairman Grant Shapps, who referred to it as an “incitement to violence” and “completely irresponsible.”
 
The Labour Party also hit out, saying Ward’s comments were counterproductive to achieving peace in the region.
[HERE]


Counterproductive to achieving peace in the region?  Are you kidding me?

Like anything this guy has to say is going to make a difference to Israel or to Palestine one way or the other.

What are these people on?

And check this out:


This will be the second disciplinary probe that Mr. Ward faces. He was temporarily suspended by the party in July last year after he called Israel an ‘apartheid state’ and refused to apologize.

[HERE]


Hello?  Doesn't this give anybody the creeps?

Ward is being attacked, punished and silenced for expressing his dissenting political opinion.


July 21, 2014

Australian politicians & law enforcement - Make headway towards controlling social media

Financial Review

Twitter move to Australia "imminent": Julie Bishop
PUBLISHED: 11 Jan 2013 11:35:00 | UPDATED: 15 Jan 2013 08:45:28


Negar Salek, James Hutchinson and AAP

Social networking giant Twitter is being tipped to open its first Australian corporate office “imminently” as part of plans to help combat cyber bullying and deepen ties with the federal and state governments.

Federal politicians have for months been lobbying the company to launch a full-time presence in Australia and make it easier for police officers to engage with the company.

Speaking after a visit to Twitter’s US headquarters on Friday, deputy opposition leader Julie Bishop said she understood the move was “imminent”.  [Now Minister for Foreign Affairs, Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party government - here.]

“That’s what they told us today - they’d be opening an office in Sydney,” she said.

“Facebook has a presence in Australia and it’s clear Twitter is about to establish one.”

Ms Bishop said it was “essential” for social networking companies to deepen ties with Australian governments and authorities.

Earlier, Ms Bishop tweeted that she was at Twitter headquarters in in San Francisco as part of the Australian American Leadership Dialogue.”There are 400 million tweets/day with most tweets posted in Jakarta!”. [AALD - NGO-charity]

Twitter did not immediately confirm the move.

Cooperation

Twitter has seven international offices with the latest being in Paris.

A new Australian corporate presence is likely to have a strong commercial motive, with Australians keenly embracing Twitter over the past six years and currently sending about 1.4 million tweets per day.

But it is also likely to ease cooperation on issues such as cyber bullying and online abuse as well as enhancing relationships with all levels of government.

It comes after a series of high-profile cases of cyber bullying, including rugby league star Robbie Farah being abused by a troll on Twitter. [SMH - September 10, 2012 - here.]

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy branded the company “arrogant” in September after he unsuccessfully tried to contact the company to discuss the Farah case and ways to combat cyber bullying.

“They just believe they don’t have to take any notice of the Australian public, any notice of the Australian laws, and they think they can behave this arrogantly,” he told Nine Network last year.

Facebook, too, has come under pressure to extend its relationship with Australian authorities. Victoria police chief Ken Lay this week met with a Facebook executive to discuss his concerns about hate pages, and Facebook’s threat to high profile prosecutions.

A spokesman for Senator Conroy told AAP on Friday that he would welcome a permanent Twitter presence in Australia. [Conroy - Labor Party - here.]

But Prime Minister Julia Gillard said an Australian office may not speed up negotiations over taking down offensive material. [Former PM]

“It hasn’t been so much a question of location of the organisation, as opposed to the will to address the issue,” she told reporters in Sydney on Friday.

We will be urging the bodies that have some control over content to have policies, not to stop people from having a genuine conversation or anything like that, but some of the extremes that have caused real harm to try and deal with that conduct.”

Twitter has had no full-time offices in Australia since launching in 2006 despite launching an official Twitter handle, @TwitterAU, last October.

Senior Twitter executives visited Australia in late 2012 as part of a scoping study.

SOURCE - Financial Review - here.

Replace keyboards with handcuffs: Police Minister

NSW Police Minister Michael Gallacher said at a press conference in Sydney this morning that Twitter trolls should have their keyboards replaced with handcuffs.

"Honestly, these clowns who hide behind their keyboards in their mothers' basements thinking that they can send offensive messages ... we've got to empower police with the ability to replace their keyboards with handcuffs, grab them by the ears from mummy's basement and take them down to the local police station and make them understand the offensive matters that they continue to raise on the internet [bear] a terrible price."

Mr Gallacher said NSW Police did have some powers to take action against online abusers, but there needed to be some support from the federal government in making the legislation tougher.

Source - SMH -
September 10, 2012 - here.


--------------------------------------
COMMENT

So if I have this straight, there are some people in the community who are offended by tweets (or content of facebook pages) and the Australian politicians and law enforcement were (and presumably still are) lobbying to find means to curtail freedom of expression on these internet mediums.

Of course, it's all in the name of defending from cyber 'bullying'.

Politicians on both sides of the fence are, of course, happy to do what they can to bring about controls.

Julie Bishop's remark is disturbing:

Ms Bishop said it was “essential” for social networking companies to deepen ties with Australian governments and authorities.
On the contrary, I believe it's essential for social networking companies -- and the internet -- to be independent of interference from the government and all its branches.

As for 'hate' sites, one man's hate site is another man's truth.  Who is to determine what is, or is not, acceptable content?  Once that door is ajar, it's wide open to government censorship of content.  So good luck preserving freedom of expression and freedom of information.

Now the nanny state wants to step in and guard against online social media users being 'offended' by remarks, and this is all in aid of defending the thin skinned from cyber bullying and 'hate'?

No way.

Ultimately, this is about politicians and government seeking control of a communication medium and control of freedom of expression and freedom of information.

Twitter didn't take long to come around to the politicians' lobbying. 

Nine months later Twitter Australia headquarters was born:

Twitter opens local headquarters

    The Australian
    September 02, 2013 12:00AM

TWITTER has appointed a country manager for Australia and will officially open its local headquarters in Sydney this week, as the US social media giant pushes to build its advertising business in more markets ahead of a rumoured public offering.

Recently, Twitter started offering its so-called "promoted products" in Australia, with businesses paying to have promoted tweets pushed into users' timelines, promoted accounts included in "who to follow" recommendations and "promoted trends" appearing on the popular topics list.

Twitter won't divulge how many Australian advertisers it has signed, although it said National Australia Bank and Qantas were among the brands that have used the platform for marketing.
...

However, the platform has at times proved problematic for brands. Qantas saw one promotional campaign became a PR fail when users hijacked its hashtag "#QantasLuxury" to make fun at the airline's expense.

"You always have episodes of bad behaviour, especially on open platforms," Mr Rao said.

"(One benefit) from having people on the ground ... is our teams can actively work with organisations in Australia to understand best practices so we can manage accounts on the platform in the best way possible."

...extracts only...full @...
SOURCE - The Australian - here.

The Australian's article is all about the business/advertising side of things, save for revealing that the #QantasLuxury hashtag wound up being the butt of Twitter jokes. 

Was Qantas offended?  Was this a form of online bullying?  Was it a form of cyber hate?  And did the NSW police minister ensure all those responsible were held accountable?  Did all those Twitter basement-dwellers bear a terrible price?  And has the police minister replaced their keyboards with handcuffs?