A clear majority of the British public agrees with the prosecution of a protester who burned poppies on Armistice Day, although support for legal action against offensive protests in general is not as strong,
our poll reveals.
Older people and Conservatives more in favour of prosecution
It seems that age and political leaning has an impact on your views on the matter, with older people more likely than their younger counterparts to support the prosecution of protesters, and with those intending to vote Liberal Democrat and Labour voters taking a less litigious stance than those intending to vote Conservative.
Causing offence…versus free speech
A Muslim extremist has been prosecuted and fined £50 for burning poppies at a protest last Armistice Day (November 11th). Emdadur Choudhury is part of the group Muslims Against Crusades, whose protest disrupted the annual two-minute silence with chants of ‘Burn, burn, British soldiers, British soldiers, burn in hell’. Explaining his decision to prosecute Choudhury, District Judge Howard Riddle said that the extremist’s act was a ‘calculated and deliberate insult to the dead and those who mourn or remember them’.
Notwithstanding, some have criticised the punishment for being too lenient, a sentiment which David Cameron seemed to echo when he said that he understood people who think that ‘we should be making a stronger statement that that sort of behaviour is completely out of order’.
However, the £50 fine was supported by the senior judge in charge of policy and sentencing in England and Wales, who defended the decision as carefully balancing the offence caused against the nation’s right to free speech.
See the survey details and full results here
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