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- Strafgesetzbuch section 86a - Wikipedia
Germany on Friday [September 12, 2014] announced a ban on activities that support the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, including any displays of its black flag, as part of an effort to suppress the extremist group's propaganda and recruitment work among Germans
- The selective penalty for swastikas in Germany - DW
Illegally displaying Nazi symbols in Germany can be punished by three years in jail The ban broadly exempts art, but which works are allowed to show swastikas, SS sig runes and such is often
- Swastikas and other Nazi symbols are no longer censored . . . - Gamepressure
Swastikas and other Nazi symbols, banned from German video games for two decades, are back Learn what made them unlawful, how it affected the industry, and what it took to bring them back This is not the international release of Wolfenstein 2: The New Colossus
- Are swastikas in movies censored in Germany? : r germany - Reddit
Yes, swastikas are sometimes censored in movies No, they aren't in Indiana Jones In general, you aren't allowed to use the swastika in media (see Section 86a of the German Criminal Code) There is an exception, though
- Is It Really Illegal to Display the Swastika Symbol in Germany?
As a matter of public law, the post-war German law codes prohibit the display of a swastika in any form or fashion, even if used satirically or as part of an anti-Nazi political statement
- The Ban of Right-Wing Extremist Symbols According to Section 86a of the . . .
The rise of right-wing extremism in Germany since the beginning of the 1990s corresponds with an increasing number of propaganda offences, escalating from 8337 reported cases in 2004 up to 10881 in 2005
- Understanding Germanys Strict Laws on Offensive Symbols
explore germanys strict laws on offensive symbols including the historical context legal framework and enforcement learn about the swastika ban other prohibited symbols and international comparisons
- Hans Burkhard Nix v. Germany - Global Freedom of Expression
The European Court of Human Rights rejected a case filed by a German blogger who argued that his conviction for posting a picture of Heinrich Himmler wearing a swastika armband in a blog post violated his right to freedom of expression The German courts convicted the blogger for having used symbols of an unconstitutional organization
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