Free speech

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

Psamathe

Veteran
I fail to see why a religious text should get any more respect than a book about trains. Trains at least are useful.
Exactly. He wasn't charged because he was burning a book, he was charged about the burning a book as there are no such laws covering burning books. It was the nature of his protest together with his location and thus intent.

So, if in my isolated garden I burn a copy of the Quran and shout similar messages I break no laws.
 

icowden

Shaman
Alltough i haven't read the whole verdict i read a headline that someone who attacked an peacefull anti-islam activist with an knife getting nu punishment at all.
May be you should try reading longer?

Moussa Kadri was sentenced to 20 weeks in prison, suspended for 18 months. Kadri pled guilty to assault and having a bladed article in a public place and is also required to carry out 150 hours of unpaid work and 10 days of rehabilitation. For the hard of thinking, that means that rather than spending 5 months in prison at the taxpayers expense,

Coskun who was guilty of the religiously aggravated public order offence that triggered the violence was also found guilty and fined £240.

Seems reasonably sensible and proportionate to me. Neither man covered themselves in glory and both have been suitably punished.
 

Psamathe

Veteran

You said he had not been prosecuted. He was. The sentence was too lenient, but that's not what you claimed.
I always get worried when people start criticising sentencing (though I'm sure I've done it as well). Sentencing is a complex matter with ranges of sentences depending on the offence. But then there are considerations over exactly what happened in court, how the charged person pleads, circumstances, remorse, etc. so impossible for those without that knowledge, experience and attendance to sensibly comment of sentence.
 

icowden

Shaman
You said he had not been prosecuted. He was. The sentence was too lenient, but that's not what you claimed.

He seems to have been fortunate in the choice of the crimes he was prosecuted for. These appear to have been common assault and possession of a bladed weapon. For assault I suspect he was graded at A1 up to 26 weeks custody. For the possession charge it's from 12 weeks to a year. A guilty plea plus mitigations e.g. first offence, out of character etc seem to have been taken into account.

What is surprising (to me anyway) is that he was not prosecuted for threatening with an offensive weapon in a public place. This would have been category A1 where the starting point is 2 years custody and the minimum is 1 year 6 months.
 

C R

Guru
He seems to have been fortunate in the choice of the crimes he was prosecuted for. These appear to have been common assault and possession of a bladed weapon. For assault I suspect he was graded at A1 up to 26 weeks custody. For the possession charge it's from 12 weeks to a year. A guilty plea plus mitigations e.g. first offence, out of character etc seem to have been taken into account.

What is surprising (to me anyway) is that he was not prosecuted for threatening with an offensive weapon in a public place. This would have been category A1 where the starting point is 2 years custody and the minimum is 1 year 6 months.

Yes, I was surprised that he didn't get a custodial sentence, but we can only speculate as to how the charging decision was taken.
 
Deliberately eating a pork pie in front of a Jew or Muslim might be intended to cause offence. Wearing a Satanic design t shirt to a church wedding might also be. None of them should be a criminal offence and other laws shouldn't be manipulated to make it one.

As I've already said the law is what it is. Talking of Pork Pies and the rest is whataboutery.

If you don't like it then campaign for change.
 

AuroraSaab

Pharaoh
The same law that was interpreted in such a way as to convict the book burner could convict the pie eater or t shirt wearer. Sure the law exists, but was its intention to be used to stop an individual saying insulting things in public about any religion? I doubt that it was but now a precedent has been set that in effect reinstates blasphemy.
 
Last edited:

icowden

Shaman
The same law that was interpreted in such a way as to convict the book burner could convict the pie eater or t shirt wearer. Sure the law exists, but was its intention to be used to stop an individual saying insulting things in public about any religion? I doubt that it was but now a precedent has been set that in effect reinstates blasphemy.

Well the law was passed in 1998 and is specifically about religion:-
Religiously aggravated public order is a hate crime offense in the UK where a public order offense is committed, and the offender demonstrates hostility based on the victim's religious beliefs, or the offense is motivated by such hostility
It is a summary only crime and does not carry a prison sentence - just a fine.
 

AuroraSaab

Pharaoh
I didn't see anybody going in to the consulate in the video. I'm not aware that his insults were directed at a particular Muslim. His assailant was passing by, got agitated, went off and came back with a huge knife.

'Anyone Muslim'

So the victims are Islam and Muslims in general then? No specific victim. The judge said that the fact that 'someone took exception' was enough to mean his actions were disorderly and therefore criminal. Whilst not perhaps designating it a blasphemy offence, it's on the slippery slope.
 

icowden

Shaman
So the victims are Islam and Muslims in general then? No specific victim. The judge said that the fact that 'someone took exception' was enough to mean his actions were disorderly and therefore criminal. Whilst not perhaps designating it a blasphemy offence, it's on the slippery slope.
Take it up with Tony Blair.
 
It doesn't need a 'victim' though I guess somebody needs to be upset/offended or whatever.

You need to have been living under a rock for decades to not understand the particular reverence in which the Koran is held by its adherents.

Others post of different religions, pork pies etc, as distractions. I'd be pretty certain, even if its not yet happened, actions involving those groups could cross a threshold; maybe stuff with pork meat and the sacred parts of a Synagogue?
 
Top Bottom