5/7/15, "Norway ends blasphemy law after Hebdo attack," The Local Norway
"Norway has scrapped its longstanding blasphemy law, meaning it is now legal to mock the beliefs of others, in a direct response to January’s brutal attack on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.
The proposal to rush through the change was made in February by
Conservative MP Anders B. Werp and Progress Party MP Jan Arild
Ellingsen, who argued that the law “underpins a perception that
religious expressions and symbols are entitled to a special
protection”.
“This is very unfortunate signal to send, and it is time that society
clearly stands up for freedom of speech,” the two wrote in their
proposal.
Norway’s parliament first voted to scrap the blasphemy law back in
2009, against strong opposition from the Christian Democrat party. But
the move has yet to come into force because the country’s new penal code
remains delayed by problems updating the computer systems used by
police and prosecutors.
The decision to push through the change was attacked as “cultural
suicide” by Finn Jarle Sæle, editor of the Norwegian Christian weekly,
Norge IDAG.
But the change will be largely symbolic. The last time anyone was tried for blasphemy in Norway was back in
1933, when the writer Arnulf Overland was prosecuted for giving a
lecture titled "Christianity, the tenth plague" to the Norwegian
Students' Society. He was acquitted.
The last time anyone was actually convicted was in 1912, when the
journalist Arnfred Olsen was taken to court for an article criticising
Christianity in the radical magazine Freethinkers."
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