FREE THINKER ATHEIST WOMAN HARRASSED BY TROLLS GOES TO TRIAL
Issued on: 22/06/2021
Eighteen-year-old Mila walks back to the courtroom after a break during the opening hearing of the so-called "Mila case" trial where thirteen people face charges of online harassment and in some cases death threats against the then teenager who strongly criticised Islam in social media posts. © Bertrand Guay, AFP
A landmark cyberbullying trial in Paris – over thousands of threats against a teenager who strongly criticised Islam in online posts – is blazing a trail in efforts to punish and prevent online abuse.
Thirteen young people of various backgrounds and religions from around France face potential prison time for charges including online harassment, online death threats and online rape threats in the two-day trial wrapping up Tuesday.
It is the first such trial since France created a new court in January to prosecute online crimes, including harassment and discrimination.
One of the defendants wants to become a police officer. Another says he just wanted to rack up more followers by making people laugh. Some denied wrongdoing, others apologised. Most said they tweeted or posted without thinking.
The teen at the centre of the trial, who has been identified publicly only by her first name, Mila, told the court she feels as if she’s been “condemned to death".
"I do not see my future,” she said.
Mila, who describes herself as atheist, was 16 when she started posting videos on Instagram and later TikTok strongly criticising Islam and the Quran. Now 18, she testified that “I don’t like any religion, not just Islam.”
Her lawyer Richard Malka said Mila has received some 100,000 threatening messages, including death threats, rape threats, misogynist messages and hateful messages about her homosexuality.
Mila had to quit her secondary school, then another. She is now monitored daily by the police for her safety.
“It’s been a cataclysm, it feels like the sky is falling on our heads [...] a confrontation with pure hatred,” her mother told the court.
Mila’s online enemies don’t fit a single profile. Among the thousands of threats, authorities tracked down 13 suspects who are on trial this week. All are being identified publicly only by their first names, according to French practice.
'Digital lynching'
The trial focused on comments in response to a TikTok video by Mila in November criticising Islam. A defendant named Manfred threatened to turn her into another Samuel Paty, a teacher who was beheaded outside Paris in October after showing caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed in class.
Manfred told the court he was “pretending to be a stalker to make people laugh”.
“I knew she was controversial because she criticised Islam. I wanted to have fun and get new subscribers,” he testified.
Defendant Enzo, 22, apologised in court for tweeting “you deserve to have your throat slit”, followed by a misogynistic epithet.
Others argued their posts did not constitute a crime.
“At the time, I was not aware that it was harassment. When I posted the tweet, I wasn’t thinking,” testified Lauren, a 21-year-old university student who tweeted about Mila: “Have her skull crushed, please.”
Alyssa, 20, one of the few Muslim defendants, says she reacted “like everyone else on Twitter” and stood by her criticism of Mila’s posts.
While the defence lawyer argued that it’s not the same thing to insult a god or a religion and a human being, Alyssa disagreed.
“For me, it is of the same nature. Mila used freedom of expression, I thought that (tweeting an angry response) was also freedom of expression,” she said.
Freedom of expression is considered a fundamental right and blasphemy is not a crime in France. Many French people see the right to blaspheme as a pillar of the country’s liberal, Enlightenment values, hard-won in the French Revolution’s fight against the power of the Catholic Church.
After Mila’s initial video in January 2020, a legal complaint was filed against her for incitement to racial hatred. That investigation was dropped for lack of evidence.
Nawfel, 19, said he did not see the harm when he tweeted that Mila deserved the death penalty and insulted her sexuality. He has passed tests to become a gendarme and hopes not to be sentenced, to keep a clean record. The trial has given him new perspective on online activity.
“Without social media, everyone would have a normal life,” he said. “Now there are many people who will think before they write.”
The defendants face up to two years in prison and €30,000 in fines if convicted of online harassment. Some are also accused of online death threats, an offence that carries a maximum prison sentence of three years and a fine of up to €45,000.
The prosecutor however only requested suspended sentences. A verdict is expected at a later date.
“You have the power to stop this digital lynching,” defence lawyer Malka told the judges. “Fear of the law is the only thing that remains.”
Mila remains active on social networks.
“I have this need to show that I will not change who I am and what I think,” she said. “I see it as like a woman who has been raped in the street and who is asked not to go out, so that it doesn’t happen again.”
(FRANCE 24 with AP)
A landmark cyberbullying trial in Paris – over thousands of threats against a teenager who strongly criticised Islam in online posts – is blazing a trail in efforts to punish and prevent online abuse.
Thirteen young people of various backgrounds and religions from around France face potential prison time for charges including online harassment, online death threats and online rape threats in the two-day trial wrapping up Tuesday.
It is the first such trial since France created a new court in January to prosecute online crimes, including harassment and discrimination.
One of the defendants wants to become a police officer. Another says he just wanted to rack up more followers by making people laugh. Some denied wrongdoing, others apologised. Most said they tweeted or posted without thinking.
The teen at the centre of the trial, who has been identified publicly only by her first name, Mila, told the court she feels as if she’s been “condemned to death".
"I do not see my future,” she said.
Mila, who describes herself as atheist, was 16 when she started posting videos on Instagram and later TikTok strongly criticising Islam and the Quran. Now 18, she testified that “I don’t like any religion, not just Islam.”
Her lawyer Richard Malka said Mila has received some 100,000 threatening messages, including death threats, rape threats, misogynist messages and hateful messages about her homosexuality.
Mila had to quit her secondary school, then another. She is now monitored daily by the police for her safety.
“It’s been a cataclysm, it feels like the sky is falling on our heads [...] a confrontation with pure hatred,” her mother told the court.
Mila’s online enemies don’t fit a single profile. Among the thousands of threats, authorities tracked down 13 suspects who are on trial this week. All are being identified publicly only by their first names, according to French practice.
'Digital lynching'
The trial focused on comments in response to a TikTok video by Mila in November criticising Islam. A defendant named Manfred threatened to turn her into another Samuel Paty, a teacher who was beheaded outside Paris in October after showing caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed in class.
Manfred told the court he was “pretending to be a stalker to make people laugh”.
“I knew she was controversial because she criticised Islam. I wanted to have fun and get new subscribers,” he testified.
Defendant Enzo, 22, apologised in court for tweeting “you deserve to have your throat slit”, followed by a misogynistic epithet.
Others argued their posts did not constitute a crime.
“At the time, I was not aware that it was harassment. When I posted the tweet, I wasn’t thinking,” testified Lauren, a 21-year-old university student who tweeted about Mila: “Have her skull crushed, please.”
Alyssa, 20, one of the few Muslim defendants, says she reacted “like everyone else on Twitter” and stood by her criticism of Mila’s posts.
While the defence lawyer argued that it’s not the same thing to insult a god or a religion and a human being, Alyssa disagreed.
“For me, it is of the same nature. Mila used freedom of expression, I thought that (tweeting an angry response) was also freedom of expression,” she said.
Freedom of expression is considered a fundamental right and blasphemy is not a crime in France. Many French people see the right to blaspheme as a pillar of the country’s liberal, Enlightenment values, hard-won in the French Revolution’s fight against the power of the Catholic Church.
After Mila’s initial video in January 2020, a legal complaint was filed against her for incitement to racial hatred. That investigation was dropped for lack of evidence.
Nawfel, 19, said he did not see the harm when he tweeted that Mila deserved the death penalty and insulted her sexuality. He has passed tests to become a gendarme and hopes not to be sentenced, to keep a clean record. The trial has given him new perspective on online activity.
“Without social media, everyone would have a normal life,” he said. “Now there are many people who will think before they write.”
The defendants face up to two years in prison and €30,000 in fines if convicted of online harassment. Some are also accused of online death threats, an offence that carries a maximum prison sentence of three years and a fine of up to €45,000.
The prosecutor however only requested suspended sentences. A verdict is expected at a later date.
“You have the power to stop this digital lynching,” defence lawyer Malka told the judges. “Fear of the law is the only thing that remains.”
Mila remains active on social networks.
“I have this need to show that I will not change who I am and what I think,” she said. “I see it as like a woman who has been raped in the street and who is asked not to go out, so that it doesn’t happen again.”
(FRANCE 24 with AP)
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