Arab News

Outrage as far-right MP tweets: ‘Did you mean to placate the barbaric, Muslim, gang-raping hordes of men?’

-

BERLIN: Germany signaled Monday it was open to amending a controvers­ial law combatting online hate speech as the justice minister fell victim to the rules he himself championed.

The move came after Twitter deleted a post by Heiko Maas dating back to 2010 before he was appointed justice minister, in which he called a fellow politician “an idiot.”

The post was deleted after Twitter received several complaints, fueling a simmering row over the new regulation which critics say stifle freedom of speech.

Government spokesman Steffen Seibert said an evaluation would be carried out within six months to examine how well the new law was working.

“It’s best to conduct the evaluation with an open mind, and then we’ll see what experience can be drawn from it, what impact and then all that would be weighed up,” he told reporters.

Germany adopted the law, one of the toughest in the world, after a surge in racist and incendiary speech online, particular­ly after the arrival of more than 1 million asylum-seekers since 2015.

The legislatio­n, which came into force on Jan. 1, requires social media giants to remove hate speech and other illegal content, or risk fines of up to €50 million ($57 million).

Companies such as Twitter and Facebook have 24 hours to remove posts that openly violate German law after they are flagged by users.

But critics said the law pushes social media companies into taking a pro-active stance in deleting potentiall­y offensive posts, effectivel­y handing them the power of censorship.

Parties including the AfD, the pro-business FDP, far-left Linke as well as Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Bavarian allies CSU are lining up to demand it be scrapped or amended.

The row returned to haunt the justice minister over the weekend when he found his tweet about Thilo Sarrazin, a politician who wrote a controvers­ial book on Muslim immigrants, had been deleted.

Speaking to Bild on Monday, Maas said he “did not receive any informatio­n from Twitter about why the tweet was deleted,” admitting there are “things that I would no longer tweet today.”

Barely a week after coming into force, the new law has sparked intense debate as it snared highprofil­e individual­s.

Far-right MP Beatrix von Storch became the first prominent politician to fall foul of the new rules with posts deleted from both Twitter and Facebook.

Von Storch, deputy leader of the anti-immigratio­n AfD party’s parliament­ary group, had criticized Cologne police for sending a New Year’s greeting in Arabic on Twitter.

“What the hell is going on with this country? Why is an official police site ... tweeting in Arabic?” she wrote. “Did you mean to placate the barbaric, Muslim, gangraping hordes of men?”

Her colleague Jens Maier is facing a criminal complaint over a tweet that called Boris Becker’s son a “half-negro.”

The AfD capitalize­d on discontent against a mass influx of asylum seekers to Germany since 2015 to make the strongest showing for a far-right party in a national election in the post-war era.

 ??  ?? German Justice Minister Heiko Maas fell victim to anti-hate speech rules he himself championed. Maas had in a 2010 tweet called Thilo Sarrazin, a politician who wrote a controvers­ial book on Muslim immigrants, ‘an idiot’. (AFP)
German Justice Minister Heiko Maas fell victim to anti-hate speech rules he himself championed. Maas had in a 2010 tweet called Thilo Sarrazin, a politician who wrote a controvers­ial book on Muslim immigrants, ‘an idiot’. (AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia