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Thursday, May 26, 2005 [translated from the
French]: French
Court attempts to block Internet Access to the
AAARGH WEBSITE WE recall that the revisionist Internet site
AAARGH (Association des anciens amateurs des
récits de guerre et d'holocauste) has
been the subect of a lawsuit (see our message of
March 8, 2005) titled "Revisionist Website AAARGH
confronted by summary procedure") which has pitted
eight anti-racist associations, which had decided
to render the website inaccessible at least in
France thanks to a web filter system, against its
US host server and ten access and service
providers. In its last procedural
decision, dated April 28, 2005, the Tribunal
ordered a certain number of extremely
restrictive provisional measures against the US
server and the access providers which had
neither suppressed access to the website yet,
nor agreed to turn over to the (French) justice
authorities the name of the site's author or
webmaster. The next court hearing will take place on Monday
May 30, 2005 at 2 pm in the court room of the
supplementary Première Chambre of the TGI in
Paris, where the President Emmanuel Binoche
has provided according to the procedural ordinance
which he handed down on April 20, 2005 that he
will - "verify if the [US] companies
OLM-LLC, Globat, LLC and ThePlanet.com Internet
Services have complied with the [French
legal] obligations imposed on them, and
if they have not, will examine any request for
liquidation of the provisional obligation"
- "examine the requests which will in that
event be presented by the plaintiff associations
with the intention of putting an end to access
from within France to the content of the website
identified in the complaint against the access
providers."
Today it is still possible to access easily the
AAARGH website via the following address: http://anonymouse.ws/cgi-bin/anon-www.cgi/http://vho.org/aaargh/ It provides advice to readers to defeat any
future filters by making use of anonymous mirror
sites in the event that the TGI, "which lives in
the most complete unreality," may order such
filtering. |