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This week, the 30-year-old is due to appear in court, accused of hate speech against a taxi driver.
The taxi driver had to endure loud verbal gunfire when he stopped to drop off customers at Heimdalsgata in Oslo exactly one year ago.
It was 4 a.m. on Sunday and the 29-year-old Norwegian was drunk and had vomited in the taxi. Both the taxi driver and others at the scene encouraged him to make it up, but the drunken Norwegian had other plans.
– Damn black … you are a slave … I am white, you are black, the police will not come, it is said that the man told the taxi driver.
When asked by another person to make it up, he said according to the indictment:
– No, he’s a black man. We know better how to treat you. You have to step on the blacks.
Admits partial guilt
Finally, the police arrived at the scene and the man ended up in custody. He is now charged with damage to the taxi, hate speech and with not giving personal data to the police.
The 30-year-old man has pleaded partially guilty, but denies being guilty of parts of the allegation. His lawyer, Petar Sekulic, does not want to go into detail about what the man does and does not recognize.
– There are parts of this performance that you recognize, but not all. He will explain this in court and therefore I don’t want to delve into this, Sekulic says.
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Type of priority violation
Police attorney Maiken Brovold says police take seriously the type of hate crime the man is charged with.
“Investigation and prosecution of hate crimes, including hate speech and acts of violence that may be motivated by a person’s skin color or national or ethnic origin, generally have a high priority in prosecutions. criminal, “says Brovold.
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It refers to the guidelines of the Attorney General’s Office for the police and prosecutors, which are expressed in the circular Objectives and priorities for the criminal process in 2020 (external link, pdf).
– Such crimes not only affect the individual victim, but can easily generate fear and insecurity in larger groups of the population, he says and adds:
– With regard to this case specifically, I do not want to comment on the evidence before the case is processed in court.
The Attorney General on hate crimes
Therefore, the Attorney General is the supreme leader of the tax authority in Norway. Each year, the Attorney General writes what type of crime should be prioritized. Hate crime is one of the priorities and it is written, among other things:
The Attorney General prioritizes the investigation of the following types of cases in 2020:
(…) Criminal offenses motivated by skin color, nationality, religion or vision of life, sexual orientation or disability of the victim (hate crime).
On page 13 of the summary, the Attorney General writes in more detail:
Special attention should be paid to so-called hate crimes. The Attorney General is very satisfied that several police districts have had the criminal form on the agenda of the 2019 business days. The Government’s strategy against hate speech 2016-2020 emphasizes that it wants hate crimes to be prioritized in all police districts, and that police chiefs must ensure that hate crimes are followed up. Police should also pay attention to hateful criminal comments directed at politicians and other public debaters that are apt to influence the climate of speech in such a negative way that some withdraw from politics or choose not to participate in public debate.
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