by Soeren Kern | http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org
October 28, 2013
"There is no
need to be tolerant to the intolerant" — European Framework National
Statute for the Promotion of Tolerance, Article 4
"The
supra-national surveillance that it would imply would certainly be a dark day
for European democracy." — European Dignity Watch
While European leaders are busy expressing public
indignation over reports of American espionage operations in the European
Union, the European Parliament is quietly considering a proposal that calls for
the direct surveillance of any EU citizen suspected of being
"intolerant."
Critics say the measure -- which seeks to force the
national governments of all 28 EU member states to establish "special
administrative units" to monitor any individual or group expressing views
that the self-appointed guardians of European multiculturalism deem to be
"intolerant" -- represents an unparalleled threat to free speech in a
Europe where citizens are already regularly punished for expressing
the "wrong" opinions, especially about Islam.
The proposed European Framework
National Statute for the Promotion of Tolerance was recently
presented to members of the Civil Liberties,
Justice and Home Affairs Committee of the European Parliament, the
only directly-elected body of the European Union.
The policy proposal was drafted by the European Council on
Tolerance and Reconciliation (ECTR), a non-governmental organization
established in Paris in 2008 by the former president of Poland, Aleksander
Kwasniewski, and the president of the European Jewish Congress, Moshe Kantor.
The ECTR -- which describes itself as a
"tolerance watchdog" that "prepares practical recommendations to
governments and international organizations on improving interreligious and
interethnic relations on the continent" -- includes on its board more than
a dozen prominent European politicians, including former Spanish Prime Minister
José María Aznar.
The ECTR first presented its proposal
for a Europe-wide Law on Tolerance to the European Parliament in November 2008
as part of the European Week of Tolerance that marked the 70th anniversary of
theKristallnacht, a night of anti-Semitic violence that began the Jewish
Holocaust in Germany.
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