Thursday, July 14, 2016

German Police Launch Mass Raids Over Online Hate Speech


German police on Wednesday launched nationwide raids targeting social media users who posted racial hatred on Facebook and other online networks.
Police swooped on the homes of some 60 suspects across 14 of Germany's 16 states, the BKA federal crime bureau said, in a crackdown on "verbal radicalism" and related criminal offences.
No arrests were made but computer equipment, cameras and smartphones were seized in the first-ever such mass raids targeting online hate crime.
Most of the suspects allegedly belonged to a neo-Nazi Facebook group whose users had posted xenophobic, anti-Semitic or other far-right messages.
BKA chief Holger Muench said police were taking a "clear stance against hate and incitement on the Internet" which had increased amid the refugee crisis and was poisoning public discourse.
Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said that "violence, including verbal violence, in any form and in any context" was "unacceptable".
He said there are "moral principles offline and online" and stressed that "criminal law applies on the internet".

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