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Illustrationsbild / bild ur polisens förundersökning (TT / Polisen)

Spred klipp på eldad koran – åtalas för hets

En man åtalas för hets mot folkgrupp sedan han publicerat en film av en koranbränning till ljudet av musik som är starkt förknippad med moskéattacken i Christchurch i Nya Zeeland, där 51 personer mördades, skriver TT.

Mannen spred filmen på Twitter och Youtube hösten 2020.

Det har aldrig prövats i rättsligt om en koranbränning kan utgöra hets mot folkgrupp. Även om målet inte handlar om bränningen i sig utan om filmen så blir det intressant att ta del av domstolens överväganden, säger chefsåklagare Eva Nemec Nordh.

– Men det som är avgörande för att jag faktiskt valde att väcka åtal är att man lägger på den här musiken, som är så starkt kopplad till massakern.

Den åtalade nekar till brott. Rättegången hålls senare i september i Linköpings tingsrätt.

bakgrund
 
Moskéattacken i Christchurch
Wikipedia (en)
On 15 March 2019, two consecutive mass shootings occurred in a terrorist attack on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. The attacks, carried out by a lone gunman who entered both mosques during Friday prayer, began at the Al Noor Mosque in the suburb of Riccarton at 1:40 pm and continued at the Linwood Islamic Centre at 1:52 pm. 51 people were killed and 40 others were injured.The gunman, 28-year-old Brenton Harrison Tarrant from Grafton, New South Wales, Australia, was arrested after his vehicle was rammed by a police unit as he was driving to a third mosque in Ashburton. He was described in media reports as a white supremacist. He had live-streamed the first shooting on Facebook, and prior to the attack, had published an online manifesto; both the video and manifesto were subsequently banned in New Zealand and Australia. On 26 March 2020, he pleaded guilty to 51 murders, 40 attempted murders, and engaging in a terrorist act, and in August was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole – the first such sentence in New Zealand.The attack was linked to an increase in white supremacy and alt-right extremism globally observed since about 2015. Politicians and world leaders condemned it, and Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern described it as "one of New Zealand's darkest days". The government established a royal commission into its security agencies in the wake of the shootings, which were the deadliest in modern New Zealand history and the worst ever committed by an Australian national. The commission submitted its report to the government on 26 November 2020, the details of which were made public on 7 December.
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