With regard to limitations on the right to freedom of expression, says Villafane, it is necessary to refer to international treaties dealing with racial or religious hatred, including, for example, the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, the American Convention on Human Rights, the UN International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, among others. These conventions, to which Argentina is a signatory, he says, provide the basis for the Argentine judge’s decision to issue the injunction against Google.Villafañe, who also is president of the Iberoamerican Association of Rights of Information and Communication (AIDIC), is known as a militant defender of freedom of speech. He also was the judge presiding over the extradition to Germany of Josef Schwammberger, a Nazi war criminal captured in Argentina, in November 1987. “I’m in favor of freedom of speech and also against racism,” he concludes.Coincidentally, May 17 was also World Internet Day, marked in Argentina with large online events promoting the commercial and educational use of the Web. “Internet is also used as a channel for the dissemination of discriminatory ideas. We work to make it a space of free communication – free from discrimination,” concludes the Latin American Jewish Congress’s Epelman.
Watching the Web
An Argentinian court has instructed Google to restrict anti-Semitic searches and content.
With regard to limitations on the right to freedom of expression, says Villafane, it is necessary to refer to international treaties dealing with racial or religious hatred, including, for example, the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, the American Convention on Human Rights, the UN International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, among others. These conventions, to which Argentina is a signatory, he says, provide the basis for the Argentine judge’s decision to issue the injunction against Google.Villafañe, who also is president of the Iberoamerican Association of Rights of Information and Communication (AIDIC), is known as a militant defender of freedom of speech. He also was the judge presiding over the extradition to Germany of Josef Schwammberger, a Nazi war criminal captured in Argentina, in November 1987. “I’m in favor of freedom of speech and also against racism,” he concludes.Coincidentally, May 17 was also World Internet Day, marked in Argentina with large online events promoting the commercial and educational use of the Web. “Internet is also used as a channel for the dissemination of discriminatory ideas. We work to make it a space of free communication – free from discrimination,” concludes the Latin American Jewish Congress’s Epelman.