Talk:Insult of officials and the state

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Elinruby in topic Recent changes (based on AfD discussion)

Feedback from New Page Review process edit

I left the following feedback for the creator/future reviewers while reviewing this article: Thank you for this new article, but it appears to use the otherwise unknown term "Insult of officials and the state" for an offense that is called many different things in various countries, and it has no introduction that informs the reader on the definition of the offense and why some countries have laws about it..

---DOOMSDAYER520 (Talk|Contribs) 02:24, 6 August 2020 (UTC)Reply

Compiling refrerences edit

Albania
Bahrain

FEBRUARY 5, 2014 Bahrain toughens penalties for insulting king By Reuters Staff

Belarus
  • On 31 January 2022, a woman in Belarus was handed an 18-month prison sentence for "insulting" the country’s authoritarian ruler, Alexander Lukashenko and other authorities after pictures mocking the officials were found on her phone.[1]
Botswana

in Social Analysis Author: Pnina Werbner and Richard Werbner DOI: https://doi.org/10.3167/sa.2019.630305

Netherlands

https:theguardian.com/world/2018/feb/05/dutch-divided-over-law-against-insulting-the-king Dutch divided over law against insulting the king Government in the Netherlands split over attempts to scrap its lèse-majesté law

Daniel Boffey in Brussels Mon 5 Feb 2018

  • [https:amp.smh.com.au/world/europe/dutch-parliament-reduces-penalties-for-insulting-king-20180411-p4z8yx.html Dutch Parliament reduces penalties for insulting king]

By Christopher Schuetze April 11, 2018 — 2.17pm


Germany

Jan 25, 2017

Hong Kong

Proposed law to ban insulting police stirs debate; Some Hong Kong lawmakers say a law prohibiting insults against police may fuel more social unrest By JEFF PAO DECEMBER 17, 2019

Iceland

BY STAFF |MAR 24 2017 See Crimen injuria'

Ireland

Blasphemy law in the Republic of Ireland

Japan

By Jessie Yeung, Emiko Jozuka and Kathleen Benoza, CNN Updated 1:24 AM EDT, Tue June 14, 2022

from Part III - Legal Framework], Cambridge University Press

; Malaysia


Poland

Article 135 of the Polish penal code states that anyone who publicly insults (Polish: kto publicznie znieważa) the President of Poland is punishable by up to three years of imprisonment. Prior to March 2021, the Polish Constitutional Tribunal declared the law consistent with the Polish constitution and Polish international treaty obligations, arguing that the effective carrying out of the duties of the president requires having authority and being especially respected.[2]

Criminal Defamation and Public Insult Law in the Republic of Poland: The Curtailing of Freedom of Expression] Author(s): Michael T. Moran Date: 2018 Group(s): Michigan State International Law Review Subject(s): International law Item Type: Legal Comment Tag(s): ILR Permanent URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/znbz-a241


https://english.elpais.com/elpais/2018/10/24/inenglish/1540373559_454299.html%3foutputType=amp


Marc Bennetts in Moscow Wed 6 Mar 2019 11.36 EST [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/06/russian-parliament-outlaws-online-disrespect Russia passes law to jail people for 15 days for ‘disrespecting’ government Law allowing courts to fine or jail offenders is reminiscent of Soviet-era laws used to target dissidents, say critics]

Marc Bennetts in Moscow Wed 6 Mar 2019 11.36 EST

South Africa

27 NOV 2012


South Africa

By Sarah Britten, Mail & Guardian


Spain

Spanish Congress moves to decriminalize insulting the king: If the reform goes ahead, it will no longer be a crime to insult the monarch, national symbols, state institutions or religious sentiment EL Pais


Thailand

Thai scholar faces royal insult charge over medieval king By Reuters Staff]


[https://thediplomat.com/2022/12/will-thailand-ever-repeal-its-archaic-lese-majeste-law/ Will Thailand Ever Repeal Its Archaic Lese Majeste Law?: An exiled Thai professor talks about his campaign to abolish the controversial law, which criminalizes criticisms of the country’s monarchy]

Sebastian Strangio By Sebastian Strangio December 06, 2022


Tajikistan
  • [www.rferl.org/amp/tajik-man-murodov-jailed-insulting-president-social-media/29437715.html Tajik Man Jailed For 'Insulting' President On Social Media], RFE/RL

August 16, 2018 15:33 GMT Elinruby (talk) 22:04, 10 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

Turkey

https://guardian.ng/news/turkey-silences-critics-with-presidential-insult-law/ Turkey ‘silences critics’ with presidential insult law] By AFP 21 February 2022 |

References

  1. ^ "Two More Belarusians Sentenced For 'Insulting' Lukashenka". rferl. 31 January 2022. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference InforPrawo_lese_majeste was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Recent changes (based on AfD discussion) edit

Based on the discussion at WP:Articles_for_deletion/Insult_of_officials_and_the_state it seems this article is going to end up being kept so I decided to start tinkering with the article. Here's my thinking:

  • there's a separate article on Lèse-majesté which covers most of the same topic so I've included a short sentence and link to that article
  • I've changed the lede to be more like "list of" articles found elsewhere
  • eventually we should link to this list within Lèse-majesté
  • objections were voiced (including by me) as to whether the blasphemy column was in-scope, and nobody (on my reading) said it should be kept, so I deleted the column and its contents
  • assuming this stays as a list-only article, the title eventually needs to be changed to something like List of Countries with Laws on Insulting the State, Its Symbols or its Officials

At some point the additional sources proposed by User:Elinruby above should be included as inline cites. I'm not prepared to do that, at least not while there's still a possibility of deletion. Oblivy (talk) 03:40, 12 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

for much the same reason the above list is quick and dirty, but i am willing to work on incorporating some links. I just simply can't commit to doing all that needs to be done myself. A couple of links don't work above, (Mail&Guardian, El País) but I can find them again. On reflection my link for Japan is about cyberbullying, but Japan fits the overall pattern of a former monarchy, or empire in this case. This observation is my own and probably qualifies as synth; I have no intention of including it unsourced but i do just want to make the point that Japan is worth another look even if you probably don't want to spend any time on that particulsr link. There was another country where the link turned out to be for a legal practice and therefore unusable: it is only there to support that that country has such a law. Elinruby (talk) 17:43, 12 April 2023 (UTC)Reply