Teen Forced French Teen

Teen Forced French Teen




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A French court, on Wednesday, handed down suspended prison sentences to 11 people who were found guilty of harassing a teen girl over her anti-Islam videos.
French court, on Wednesday, handed down suspended prison sentences to 11 people who were found guilty of harassing a teen girl over her anti-Islam videos published on social media. The prosecutions came after Mila was forced to change schools and accept police protection pertaining to the threats. According to Mila’s lawyer, Mila, who recently turned 18, receive over 100,000 threats encompassing death and rape threats, misogynists messages, and hate comments for her homosexuality, which she revealed on her social media. 
Mila’s videos were first published in 2020 and featured. Since then, the schoolgirl has triggered a debate on the extent to condemn religion. While supporters have called for an increased right to expression and blasphemy, critics have called out Islamophobia and deliberate provocation. It is imperative to note while Mila started by declaring that 'the Koran is a religion of hatred,' she told the jury during her trial that it was not only Islam but she hates every religion. 
The court in Paris tried 13 people from several French regions aged 18 to 30, who were all charged with harassing Mila, with some of them sending death threats including asserting that she could have a throat cut. In its judgment on Wednesday, one of the defendants was acquitted for lack of proof, while another was released due to a procedural problem. The remaining 11 were handed suspended sentences, meaning they will not serve time in jail unless they are convicted for other offenses.
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France, which has been subjected to increased terror attacks in the past year, has attracted flak for its islamophobic sentiments. Last October, President Emmanuel Macron had spoken about a fight on ‘Islamist separatism’ Later, he made more controversial statements on the killing of teacher Samuel Patty by a Muslim student over the Charlie Hebdo cartoons on Prophet Mohammed. Praising Patty as “the face of the Republic who believed in knowledge’, that he was "killed because Islamists want our future" and that "France will not give up cartoons" have attracted widespread criticism.
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Social media rants by 16-year-old named Mila fuelled debate about right to offend people’s religious beliefs
Mila, now 18, walks outside the courtroom with her lawyer, Richard Malka, right. Photograph: Bertrand Guay/AFP/Getty Images
Last modified on Thu 3 Jun 2021 16.41 BST
Thirteen people have gone on trial in France charged with online harassment, including death threats, against a teenage girl who was placed under police protection after posting anti-Islam rants on social media.
The girl, named only as Mila, was forced to change schools over her expletive-laden videos, and the episode fuelled a debate about the right to offend people’s religious beliefs.
“The Qur’an is filled with nothing but hate, Islam is a shitty religion,” the teen said in the first post on Instagram in January 2020. She was 16 at the time.
She posted a second video in November, this time on TikTok, after the jihadist killing of the secondary school teacher Samuel Paty, who had shown students controversial cartoons of the prophet Muhammad.
The reactions to the video lambasting “your mate Allah” were swift and virulent.
“You deserve to have your throat cut,” read one, while another warned; “I’m going to do you like Samuel Paty.”
Mila was placed under police protection along with her family in Villefontaine, a town outside Lyon in south-east France.
Even Emmanuel Macron came to her defence, saying that “the law is clear. We have the right to blaspheme, to criticise and to caricature religions.”
Blasphemy 'is no crime', says Macron amid French girl's anti-Islam row
Investigators eventually identified 13 people aged 18 to 30 from several French regions and charged them with online harassment, with some also accused of threatening death or other criminal acts.
Mila, her white-blond hair shaved on the sides, made no statement as she entered the courtroom on Thursday under a flurry of press camera flashes.
Her lawyer, Richard Malka, told the court that she had “received more than 100,000 hateful messages and death threats promising to have her trussed up, cut up, quartered, beheaded, with images of coffins or doctored pictures of her decapitation”.
He said: “I cannot believe that these 13 people who have all been through our education system do not know that criticising religions is legal and has nothing to do with racism.”
France’s staunch defence of the right to mock religion and its crackdown on religious extremists have sparked protests in several Muslim countries, where the French have been accused of stigmatising Islam.
Defence lawyers argue that the 13 people on trial are unfairly taking the rap for thousands of people taking advantage of the anonymity offered by social media platforms to settle scores online.
“My client is totally overwhelmed by this affair,” Gérard Chemla, a lawyer for one of the accused, said ahead of the trial.
“He had a fairly stupid instant reaction, the type that happens every day on Twitter.”
The accused face up to two years in prison and fines of €30,000 (£26,000) for online harassment.
A conviction of death threats carries a maximum penalty of three years in prison – two people previously convicted of death threats against Mila have received prison terms.
Mila, whose criticism of Islam has endeared her to the right as well as champions of free speech, is to publish a book this month recounting her experience, titled I’m Paying the Price for Your Freedom.
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