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Italian parliament votes to toughen laws against fascist propaganda


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Italian parliament votes to toughen laws against fascist propaganda

By Crispian Balmer

 

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FILE PHOTO: A general view of the lower house of the parliament in Rome, Italy April 22, 2013. REUTERS/Tony Gentile/File Photo

 

ROME (Reuters) - Italy's lower house of parliament approved on Tuesday a bill aimed at curbing fascist propaganda, more than 70 years after the death of wartime dictator Benito Mussolini.

 

The draft law, proposed by the ruling Democratic Party (PD), follows a politically charged summer, with human rights groups warning of growing racism in Italy in the face of mass immigration across the Mediterranean from Africa.

 

Under existing laws, pro-fascist propaganda is only penalised if it is seen to be part of an effort to revive the old Fascist Party. The new bill raises the stakes by outlawing the stiff-armed Roman salute as well as the distribution of fascist or Nazi party imagery and gadgets.

 

Offenders risk up to two years in jail, with sentences raised by a further eight months if the fascist imagery is distributed over the Internet. The legislation now passes to the upper house Senate for further approval.

 

Opposition parties, including the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement and the centre-right Forza Italia (Go Italy) party of former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, said the bill posed a threat to freedom of speech.

 

But Emanuele Fiano, a PD lawmaker who drew up the legislation, dismissed such concerns.

 

"This bill does not attack personal freedoms but will act as a brake on neo-fascist regurgitation and a return of extreme right-wing ideology," he said.

 

Mussolini ruled over Italy from 1922 until 1943. He took Italy into World War Two on Adolf Hitler’s side and passed race laws under which thousands of Jews were persecuted.

 

Italy was routed by the allied forces and Mussolini, also known as "Il Duce", was executed in 1945.

 

ANTI-IMMIGRANT SENTIMENT

 

Mussolini is still admired by a hard core of supporters on the far-right and posters using fascist imagery regularly appear on city billboards -- most recently in a stylised picture of a white woman being assaulted by a muscular black man.

 

"Defend her from the new invaders," said the poster, put up by a fringe party called Forza Nuova (New Force). The group was referring to a high-profile rape case last month when four foreigners were accused of gang-raping a Polish tourist.

 

More than 600,000 migrants, mainly Africans, have come to Italy over the past four years, boosting anti-immigration sentiment in the country and pushing up support for rightist and far-right parties that demand rigid border controls.

 

Given the political climate, the ruling PD was forced on Tuesday to delay its push to approve a contested law that would grant citizenship to the children of immigrants.

 

Opposition parties said the law would encourage migrants to try to come to Italy and claimed victory when the PD announced it was dropping the bill from the Senate schedule this month.

 

"To approve this bill we need a majority, but we don't have one right now in the Senate," said Luigi Zanda, head of the PD in the upper house of parliament.

 

(Reporting by Crispian Balmer; Editing by Gareth Jones)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-09-13
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1 hour ago, retarius said:

It is half witted to say you are going to ban propaganda from one side....only presenting one side of an argument is the essence of propaganda.

 

I don't see anyone any where rushing to ban extreme left wing propaganda. Apparently the murders, genocides, and totalitarian regimes of the likes of Lenin, Stalin and Mao, and the political ideology that spawned them are fine. 

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Just now, ilostmypassword said:

So it's only liberals who do that? So you support Islamists' right to free speech?

yes everybody should have the right to free speech, so long as they are not calling for the physical harm to others - so islamists have problems in that respect, but yes for sure in their own country islamists should be able to (and they do) say anything. In Italy there is no excuse for outlawing right minded people from speaking their views.

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8 minutes ago, FreddieRoyle said:

yes everybody should have the right to free speech, so long as they are not calling for the physical harm to others - so islamists have problems in that respect, but yes for sure in their own country islamists should be able to (and they do) say anything. In Italy there is no excuse for outlawing right minded people from speaking their views.

So, if an Islamist's country is the UK or Germany, then he or should should be allowed to say whatever they like provided it doesn't advocate harming others or advocating illegal acts against them? And if other parties propose harming Muslims or committing illegal acts against them, their speech should also be suppressed?

Edited by ilostmypassword
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10 minutes ago, FreddieRoyle said:

yes everybody should have the right to free speech, so long as they are not calling for the physical harm to others - so islamists have problems in that respect, but yes for sure in their own country islamists should be able to (and they do) say anything. In Italy there is no excuse for outlawing right minded people from speaking their views.

Sorry you don't realise the inconsistencies in your own words.

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Guest Jerry787

racism, fascism, nazism, hate, dictatorship of any kind, red, white, black or false democratic power control over media and feee os speech are not a democratic expression of free speech as they impose their believe as only one believe and kills, beat, place in jail anyone who oppose them, so they shall not only be banned but anyone who try to profess it shall be jailed as such person is placing in danger the rest of people.

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