German court sentences Holocaust denier to prison

German right wing extremist Ernst Zuendel acknowledges people at court in Mannheim, southern Germany, Thursday, Feb. 15, 2007 expecting the verdict in a trial where he is accused of incitement. Zuendel, who repeatedly denied the Holocaust, was deported fr (AP Photo/Michael Probst)

AP

German right wing extremist Ernst Zuendel acknowledges people at court in Mannheim, southern Germany, Thursday, Feb. 15, 2007 expecting the verdict in a trial where he is accused of incitement. Zuendel, who repeatedly denied the Holocaust, was deported fr (AP Photo/Michael Probst)

By The Associated Press

MANNHEIM, Germany – A German court on Thursday convicted far-right activist Ernst Zundel and sentenced him to five years in prison for Holocaust denial in a case that underlined Germany’s determination to prosecute people who claim the Nazis didn’t murder six million Jews.

The 67-year-old Zundel, who was deported from Canada in 2005, was convicted on 14 counts of inciting hatred for years of anti-Semitic activities, including contributing to a Web site devoted to denying the Holocaust – a crime in Germany.

Zundel showed no emotion when Judge Ulrich Meinerzhagen read the verdict, only nodding occasionally.

Zundel, who has also lived in Tennessee, and his supporters argued that he was a peaceful campaigner being denied his right to free speech.

His attorney, Ludwig Bock, said he would appeal.

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“What is notable is the iron-hard refusal of the court to allow consideration of new scientific findings or expert opinions,” Bock said.

Prosecutors in Germany were able to bring charges because the Web site is accessible there.

The German prosecution won praise from Bnai Brith Canada, a Jewish human rights group.

“The case of Ernst Zundel demonstrates clearly the strength, determination and resolve of Germany’s hate crimes legislation, in stark contrast to our own,” executive Vice President Frank Dimant said in a statement.

Dimant said Canadian hate crimes laws did not specifically recognize Holocaust denial as a crime.

Zundel faced 14 counts of incitement for disseminating anti-Semitic propaganda through a series of pamphlets and the Web site. Denying the Holocaust can bring three months to five years in prison.

His trial began in November in this southwestern city after an initial attempt to try him collapsed in March 2006 over a dispute with one of his attorneys, Sylvia Stolz.

At one stage, she was carried from the courtroom, screaming “Resistance! The German people are rising up.”