domenica 24 novembre 2013

Belpietro v. Italy: Does Parliamentary Privilege Extend to the Press?


Ronan Ó Fathaigh 


Ghent University

Dirk Voorhoof 


Ghent University - Faculty of Political and Social Sciences

October 1, 2013

European Human Rights Cases, 2013, Vol. 14, No. 12 

Abstract:      
In Belpietro v. Italy, the European Court of Human Rights reviewed the conviction of a newspaper editor for publishing a defamatory article written by an Italian senator targeting a number of public officials. Criminal proceedings against the senator were dropped as the newspaper article was considered to be covered by parliamentary immunity. The European Court held that the editor’s conviction did not violate the right to freedom of expression; however, the Court did hold that the sanctions imposed (including a suspended four-month prison sentence) were disproportionate. While the Court’s ruling on the sanctions point is correct, this article questions whether the Court’s main ruling on the editor’s criminal liability is consistent with the Court’s prior case law. Further, the issue of parliamentary immunity is explored, and in particular, whether this immunity should extend to protecting editors from criminal prosecution.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 11

Keywords: European Convention on Human Rights. Freedom of expression. Criminal defamation. Parliamentary Privilege. Chilling effect.

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