The
Times Higher Education Supplement July 4, 2003 [French]
Holocaust Revision Historian Faces
Jail Jane Marshall Paris FRENCH historian
Jean Plantin last week won an
appeal to restore two postgraduate degrees
that had been withdrawn on grounds of
their Holocaust-related
revisionism. But within days of the decision, he was
sentenced to six months in prison for
continuing his publishing activities
despite a ban and criminal
convictions. David
Irving comments: SO yet another
writer, a historian, goes to jail
and is punished for investigating
what really happened to the Jews
in WWII. I am
always reminded of that good man
Auberon Waugh, who in May
1992 first asked in The Daily
Telegraph the question,
What
sort of truth requires these
sanctions? after the
Germans took similar action
against me (fining me $30,000 for
uttering a sentence which the
Poles have now grudgingly
admitted to be true). | In 1990, Mr Plantin was awarded a masters
degree with
distinction in contemporary history
by the University of Lyon 2
Lumière, for a dissertation on
Paul Rassinier, a founder of French
revisionism. The following year, he gained
a postgraduate diploma from Lyon 3
Jean-Moulin for research into typhus
epidemics in German concentration
camps.In 1999, Mr
Plantin was given a six-month suspended
sentence for denying crimes against
humanity, which is a criminal offence
in France, after publishing a review of
banned works.
He
was also prohibited from publishing any
more of his own
writings. Anti-racist associations succeeded in
persuading the two universities to revoke
Mr Plantin's qualifications in 2000 and
2001, but he appealed against the
decisions. Last week, the Lyon administrative
court found in Mr Plantin's favour on
legal grounds and restored his degrees.
Under the law, universities can annul a
degree that they have awarded only within
four months of its presentation. In Mr
Plantin's cases, nine or ten years had
elapsed. Although Mr Plantin had handed over his
publishing company to his mother and to a
friend, former Lyon academic Jean
Faurisson, he continued to distribute
revisionist works and promoted his theses
on the internet. Shortly after he was officially
reinstated as a historian, the Lyon appeal
court upheld a ruling made in January that
sentenced Mr Plantin to six months in
prison for contravening the 1999 order
forbidding him from publishing books or
journals. The sentence now awaits confirmation
from the Court of Cassation, the highest
court in the French judicial system.
-
Editor
Gets Prison Questioning Holocaust
-
European
Court of Human Rights rejects Garaudy
appeal
-
Thesis
mark [of Rocques]
condemned
-
France
stops doctorate on Nazi gas
chambers
-
IHR
publishes thesis as book
-
Dossier
on the French Government's fight
against Free Speech
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