Verbotsgesetz 1947

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The Verbotsgesetz 1947 (Prohibition Act 1947) abbreviated VerbotsG, is an Austrian constitutional law passed on 8 May 1945,[1] which banned the National Socialist German Workers' Party and provided the legal grounds for the process of denazification in Austria, as well as aiming to suppress any potential revival of National Socialism.

The present version became applicable on 18 February 1947. The law, which was updated in 1992, prohibits Holocaust revisionism as well as the deliberate belittlement of any claimed National Socialist atrocities. Before 1992, some courts had interpreted the clampdown on reviving the ideology of National Socialism as prohibiting Holocaust revisionism in particular, but since the law didn't explicitly prohibit such denials, there was considerable debate over the matter until the amendment.[2]

Law text

According to Article I VerbotsG, the NSDAP, its paramilitary organisations such as SS, SA, the National Socialist Motor Corps and National Socialist Flyers Corps, as well as all affiliated associations were dissolved and banned; any restructuring is forbidden. To underpin the prohibition, the Verbotsgesetz itself, though constitutional law, comprises several penal provisions classifying any act of (re-)engagement in National Socialist activities (Wiederbetätigung) as a punishable offense. Section 3 h VerbotsG included in 1992 states that

whoever in a printed work, on broadcasting or in any other media,
or whoever otherwise publicly in a matter that it makes it accessible to many people,
denies, belittles, condones or tries to justify the Nazi genocide or other Nazi crimes against humanity

shall be punished with imprisonment for one year up to ten years, in the case of special perilousness of the offender or the engagement up to twenty years. All cases are to be tried by jury.

The provisions concerning the denazification in Austria have been rendered inoperative by a 1957 amnesty. Former members of Nazi organisations were banned from the 1945 legislative election. The initial death penalty was abolished in 1950.

Application

In 1985 the Austrian Constitutional Court ruled that the remaining regulations are directly applicable in the country's legal system, binding every court and every administrative agency of Austria. Upon the 1992 amendment, the Austrian Supreme Court stated that any reasoning or argumentation concerning the Nazi genocide and the Nazi crimes against humanity is no admissible evidence.

Up to today numeorus verdicts are handed down by Austrian courts based on the Verbotsgesetz, most notably the conviction of David Irving at the Vienna Landesgericht für Strafsachen on 20 February 2006.

See also

References

  1. Austrian state law gazette, 6 June 1945 (German)
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links