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Holocaust survivors ask Facebook to remove negationist content

2020-07-29T21:22:15.011Z


In the United States, revisionism and negationism are not prohibited by law. Case law tends to place them under the protection of the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of expression.


Holocaust survivors call on Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg to remove denialist content from the social network, in a video message posted Wednesday. Nine survivors testify in the video posted on the largest social network in the world, including Eva Schloss, half-sister of Anne Frank, now 91 years old. It was carried out in partnership with Claims Conference, an organization created in 1951 in particular to work to recover looted property.

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" When people say online that the Holocaust never happened, they say that my father, my sister and sixty members of my family were not murdered by the Nazis, " says Lea Evron, today 85 years old. Of Polish origin, she escaped the extermination camps along with her mother when her father and sister were deported in 1943. " Those who say the Holocaust did not exist call me a liar ", sums up Sidney Zoltak, also of Polish origin, who escaped the camps by hiding in villages in Poland.

In a document published in early July, the anti-Semitism organization Anti Defamation League (ADL) gave several examples of Facebook groups in which users openly questioned the existence of the Holocaust or its extent. Among them the CODOH group or " committee for an open debate on the Holocaust ", where messages were still visible on Wednesday denying that the genocide of the Jews of Europe took place during the Second World War.

In July 2018, Mark Zuckerberg, who is himself Jewish, explained that he did not want to remove denialist posts from Facebook. In the United States, revisionism and negationism are not prohibited by law and jurisprudence tends to place them under the protection of the First Amendment of the Constitution, which guarantees freedom of expression. In many European states, on the other hand, revisionist or negationist remarks are liable to criminal prosecution.

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In June, the social network found itself under fire from criticism when several associations defending the rights of minorities called for a boycott of the platform to obtain that it better control content inciting to hatred, racism or violence. After the withdrawal of several large advertisers, the CEO has committed that the site will withdraw advertisements presenting certain minorities as a threat to the safety or health of the greatest number. He also promised that the social network would warn users when certain messages or content posted on Facebook violate its rules.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2020-07-29

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