- Title: German court rejects injunction for Facebook in Syrian selfie case
- Date: 7th March 2017
- Summary: WUERZBURG, GERMANY (MARCH 7, 2017) (REUTERS) TRIAL OBSERVER LEAVING COURT ROOM CHAN-JO JUN SPEAKING TO MEDIA (SOUNDBITE) (English) LAWYER FOR PLAINTIFF ANAS MODAMANI, CHAN-JO JUN, SAYING: "The picture has been online for ten weeks, and is still online as we speak today. So the message for Facebook could be: Well, in Germany you can basically do whatever you want because th
- Embargoed: 21st March 2017 16:44
- Keywords: Germany Facebook trial selfies
- Location: WUERZBURG, GERMANY
- City: WUERZBURG, GERMANY
- Country: Germany
- Topics: Crime/Law/Justice
- Reuters ID: LVA00366YM5ON
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text:A German court rejected a temporary injunction against Facebook on Tuesday (March 7) in a case brought by a Syrian refugee who sued the social networking site for failing to remove faked posts linking him to crimes and militant attacks.
The Wuerzburg district court said in a preliminary ruling that Facebook is neither a "perpetrator nor a participant" in what it said was "indisputable defamation" by Facebook users, but simply acting as a hosting provider that is not responsible for pre-emptively blocking offensive content under European law.
The posts in dispute featured a picture showing Anas Modamani, a 19-year-old from Damascus, taking a selfie with Chancellor Angela Merkel in September 2015 at a refugee shelter in the Berlin district of Spandau.
Modamani's image was subsequently shared on Facebook on anonymous accounts, alongside posts falsely claiming he was responsible for the Brussels Airport bombing of March 2016 and setting on fire a homeless man in December last year by six migrants at an underground station in Berlin.
The case has been closely watched as Germany, a frequent critic of Facebook, is preparing legislation to force the social networking website to remove "hate speech" from its web pages within 24 hours or face fines.
In a statement following the decision, Facebook expressed concern for Modamani's predicament but said the court's ruling showed the company acted quickly to block access to defamatory postings, once they had been reported by Modamani's lawyer.
After the ruling, Modamani's lawyer in the case, Chan-jo Jun, said that he was disappointed such imagery continued to circulate online and more must be done to force Facebook to delete hate-filled content on its own accord.
"The picture has been online for ten weeks, and is still online as we speak today. So the message for Facebook could be: Well, in Germany you can basically do whatever you want because the court said, for a preliminary injunction it would be necessary that the deletion of content would make any difference."
The country is on alert for a tide of populist propaganda which has so far failed to materialise ahead of national elections set for September.
Tuesday's decision is subject to appeal within one month of the yet-to-be-published written judgement, a court statement said. Jun declined to say whether an appeal was planned, saying the decision remained up to his client. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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