On third December 2024, the European Court docket of Human Rights (ECtHR/Court docket) delivered its determination within the case of Yevstifeyev and Others v. Russia [App. No. 226 of 2018]. In Yevstifeyev, the ECtHR addressed two distinct functions, whereby the primary software concerned homophobic verbal assaults and threats towards LGBTI activists, which the Court docket deemed a violation of Article 14 along with Article 8 of the European Court docket of Human Rights (ECHR/Conference). In distinction, the second software involved a satirical video portraying a ‘Homosexual Hunt,’ which the Court docket discovered didn’t meet the ‘threshold of severity’ to represent a violation. On this contribution, I argue that the whereas ECtHR method within the first software is progressive when it comes to evolving the State’s optimistic obligations beneath the Conference, the second software reasoning raises vital questions concerning the Court docket’s method to hate speech, significantly concerning the excellence between context and content material, intent and impact, and the appliance of the ‘threshold of severity’ take a look at.
The Case of Yevstifeyev and Petrov
Within the first software, the Candidates have been activists who participated in a rally in St Petersburg. Throughout the rally, one of many politicians and members of the St Petersburg Legislative Meeting shouted insults and threats on the LGBTI members, calling them ‘perverts’, ‘scumbags’, and ‘AIDS-ridden’ and alleging the members as paedophiles. He urged that each one the members (together with Candidates) must be liquidated, thrown into the river, crushed with tanks, ‘solid into the cauldron’ and will ‘croak from Aids.’ He additionally threatened the Candidates saying ‘I’m going to tear off your head” and known as them, “Faggot! Absolute faggot. Faggot, faggot, faggot, get out of right here. I will provide you with a holed spoon.” (an offensive jail slang time period). When the Candidates filed prison complaints towards Milonov, the St. Petersburg Investigative Committee dismissed their claims, stating he was merely expressing private opinions. Later, when the Candidates pursued administrative and civil claims beneath Russia’s CAO and Civil Code, the Kirovskiy District Court docket dismissed their civil declare, on the reasoning that the Candidates couldn’t have heard the statements on account of background music. Appeals to the St. Petersburg Metropolis Court docket, the Supreme Court docket of Russia, and cassation courts have been all rejected, affirming that Milonov’s statements didn’t represent actionable violations.
Within the second software, the Applicant filed a criticism a few satirical video portraying a ‘Homosexual Hunt’ within the yr 2035. The video confirmed armed hunters capturing a homosexual man and was created by a widely known comedian actor as a parody of pro-government media that had urged voters to help constitutional amendments defining marriage as between one man and one lady. The video ended with the hunters posing subsequent to a useless homosexual man, with textual content encouraging viewers to vote for constitutional amendments that will authorize ‘searching homosexuals.’ The video was seen 120,000 instances and acquired feedback supporting violence towards homosexual folks. The Applicant filed each prison and administrative complaints arguing that the video incited violence towards homosexual folks. The District Court docket rejected the Applicant’s criticism, discovering the police determination lawful and well-reasoned. The Moscow Metropolis Court docket upheld this ruling. Equally, the Moscow prosecutor refused to open an administrative offence case, accepting the video creator’s clarification that it was meant to mock homophobia by exaggerating it to an absurd degree.
An ECtHR Evaluation: The Skinny Line Between Satire and Hate
The ECtHR, on the primary software, held that Russian authorities didn’t fulfil their optimistic obligation to reply adequately to homophobic verbal assault and bodily threats towards the Candidates. The Court docket emphasised that instances involving conflicts between Article 8 and Article 10 require cautious balancing. It held that Russian authorities failed to acknowledge this battle or conduct a correct balancing train, focusing solely on defending the speaker’s freedom of expression whereas disregarding the Candidates’ rights. [¶71]. The Court docket rejected the home authorities’ reasoning that the Candidates weren’t personally affected as a result of the statements focused a bunch moderately than named people. [¶73-74]. The Court docket additionally rejected the home courts’ declare that the statements may very well be interpreted neutrally, noting they have been ‘overtly homophobic and significantly aggressive and hostile in tone.’ [¶75] The Court docket concluded that failure to handle such incidents can normalize hostility and encourage additional discriminatory acts, in the end discovering a violation of Article 14 taken along with Article 8. [¶76-77]
The ECtHR, on the second software, held that the Applicant couldn’t be thought-about a sufferer of violations of Articles 8 and 14 of the Conference. The Court docket first established that the video in query contained normal damaging stereotyping of the LGBTI group moderately than immediately concentrating on the Applicant. Whereas acknowledging that damaging stereotyping of a bunch can influence members’ sense of identification and self-worth, the Court docket outlined key components for figuring out Article 8 applicability: “group traits, the content material of damaging statements, and context of the statements”. [¶52] The Court docket acknowledged that the Russian LGBTI group is a susceptible group requiring particular safety and famous the video’s broad attain because of the creator’s movie star standing. [¶54] Nevertheless, the Court docket decided that the video didn’t attain the required ‘threshold of severity’ to have an effect on the Applicant’s personal life as a result of: it was political satire and a parody of one other pro-constitutional modification video [¶55]; it appeared to mock homophobia moderately than propagate it; and it constituted commentary throughout an election marketing campaign, the place ‘a sure vivacity of remark could also be tolerated.’ [¶57] The Court docket concluded that whereas the Applicant’s emotions have been “comprehensible,” they ‘alone can’t set the boundaries of freedom of expression’ (Vajnai v. Hungary, 2008 and Ibragim Ibragimov v. Russia, 2018), and the video was in the end a political satire on a matter of public curiosity that didn’t attain the severity threshold required to have an effect on the personal lifetime of LGBTI group members. [¶59]
Increasing State’s Optimistic Obligations: First Utility
The ECtHR has considerably developed its stance on states’ optimistic obligations concerning speech regulation in instances involving the LGBT group. Within the first software, the Court docket bolstered the precept that states have a optimistic obligation to answer homophobic hate speech concentrating on teams, even when not explicitly naming people. [¶67] The Court docket rejected Russia’s argument that Milonov’s threats (“liquidate,” “solid into the cauldron”) and slurs (“perverts,” “AIDS-ridden”) towards LGBTI rally members have been mere opinions protected beneath Article 10. Drawing on precedents like Beizaras and Levinas v. Lithuania, 2021, the place Lithuania failed to research homophobic on-line feedback, and Affiliation ACCEPT v. Romania, 2021, which condemned authorities’ inaction towards soccer followers’ anti-LGBTI chants, the ECtHR emphasised that states should “successfully examine and punish” hate speech to guard susceptible minorities [¶67 & ¶73]. Crucially, it dismissed home courts’ reasoning that group-directed assaults didn’t personally have an effect on Candidates, affirming that systemic hostility towards a minority group inherently impacts members’ dignity and security—a precept beforehand utilized to racist speech in R.B. v. Hungary, 2016 and Király and Dömötör v. Hungary, 2021 [¶74].
By requiring states to steadiness free speech towards the rights of marginalized communities, the ECtHR prolonged the rationale of Aksu v. Turkey (2012), which acknowledged group-based stereotyping as dangerous to non-public life, to overtly violent rhetoric. Whereas instances reminiscent of Vejdeland v. Sweden (2012) permitted restrictions on homophobic speech beneath Article 10, Yevstifeyev uniquely framed inaction as a discriminatory failure beneath Article 14. The Court docket condemned Russia’s slim concentrate on the speaker’s intent moderately than the speech’s “aggressive and hostile tone” and its capability to incite violence. [¶75] By asserting that unchecked hate speech perpetuates systemic inequality, the ECtHR established that states’ optimistic obligations embrace dismantling environments the place discrimination thrives, even within the absence of direct bodily hurt. [¶77] In Yevstifeyev, the Court docket additional clarified that authorities should conduct a balancing train between freedom of expression and the precise to non-public life, significantly for susceptible minorities, and can’t dismiss complaints solely as a result of victims belong to a broadly focused group. [¶67 & ¶71] By condemning Russia’s failure to handle the “overtly homophobic and significantly aggressive” statements as discriminatory, the ECtHR bolstered that systemic indifference to group-directed hate speech perpetuates hostility and violates anti-discrimination protections beneath Article 14. [¶75-77]
Problematic Method within the Second Utility
The ECtHR’s ruling within the second software displays persistent ambiguities in its hate speech jurisprudence, significantly in balancing context versus content material, intent versus impact, and making use of the ‘threshold of severity’ take a look at. These points spotlight tensions between safeguarding free expression and defending marginalized teams from hurt/prejudicial speech.
(i) Context vs. Content material: Satirical Framing Overrides Dangerous Imagery
Whereas acknowledging that the Russian LGBTI group “might be thought to be a very susceptible group needing heightened safety from stigmatizing statements” [¶53], the Court docket’s concentrate on the satirical intent and political context of the video undermined this recognition. The Court docket prioritized the video’s satirical context over its express violent content material, characterizing it as “political parody” regardless of its graphic depiction of armed hunters killing a homosexual man and textual content urging constitutional amendments to legalize such violence. [¶55] This contrasts with precedents like Vejdeland (2012), and Beizaras (2021). By dismissing the video’s violent content material as exaggerated satire, the ECtHR weakened the precept from Perinçek v. Switzerland (2015) that even summary requires violence require scrutiny primarily based on their social context and capability to hurt. The ECtHR’s rationale dangers making a loophole the place dangerous rhetoric is excused as hyperbole, undermining protections for susceptible teams. Furthermore, the ECtHR in its reasoning, referred to Sanchez v. France (2013) and M’Bala M’Bala v. France (2015), to justify tolerating “vivacity of remark” in political satire. [¶57] Nevertheless, it’s pertinent to notice that these instances concerned direct criticism of public figures, not susceptible minorities. ECtHR’s reasoning is opposite to Lilliendahl v. Iceland (2020), the place homophobic Fb posts have been penalized regardless of claims of humorous intent, and Belkacem v. Belgium (2017), which criminalized extremist movies for his or her capability to incite hatred, no matter satirical framing. By privileging “public curiosity” in political discourse over the dignity of LGBTI people, the Court docket eroded the precedent set in Identoba and Others v. Georgia (2015), which prioritized defending minorities throughout public debates.
(ii) Intent vs. Impact: Creator’s Function over Documented Hurt
The ECtHR accepted the creator’s declare that the video aimed to ‘mock homophobia by absurdity’ [¶59], aligning with Jersild v. Denmark (1994), the place journalistic intent shielded a documentary that includes racist speech. Nevertheless, not like Jersild (1994), the “Homosexual Hunt” video generated 120,000 views and feedback endorsing violence towards LGBTI people—a direct causal impact the Court docket dismissed as incidental. [¶50] This neglects the Rabat Plan’s emphasis on incitement potential, which mandates assessing each intent and influence. Precedents like Erbakan v. Turkey (2006) and Soulas v. France (2008) penalized speech that risked inciting violence, even with out express intent. By isolating intent from impact, the ECtHR created a precedent the place satirical framing immunizes dangerous content material, no matter its real-world penalties. The ECtHR’s reasoning dangers normalizing hate speech disguised as satire, significantly in jurisdictions with weak protections for LGBTI rights like Poland, and Hungary. By requiring direct, “individualized hurt” moderately than recognizing “collective degradation”, the ECtHR method weakens the Beizaras (2021) precept that states should fight ‘prejudicial speech’ fostering systemic discrimination. This contrasts with Girls’s Initiatives Supporting Group v. Georgia (2021), the place authorities have been faulted for failing to stop mob violence incited by anti-LGBTI rhetoric. The reasoning of the Court docket additionally sidesteps the Court docket’s obligation beneath Nachova v. Bulgaria (2005) i.e., to interpret the Conference as a “dwelling instrument,” adapting to evolving threats towards marginalized communities.
(iii) Re-Evaluating the ‘Threshold of Severity’ Take a look at: Inconsistent Utility
The Court docket’s ‘threshold of severity’ didn’t adequately think about the real-world hurt stemming from such depictions. The components outlined in Budinova and Chaprazov (2021) and Behar and Gutman (2021) [¶52]—group traits, content material of damaging statements, and context—weren’t weighted appropriately within the Court docket’s evaluation. This slim interpretation additionally conflicts with Aksu v. Turkey (2012), the place generalized anti-Roma stereotypes have been deemed dangerous to particular person dignity, and Balsytė-Lideikienė v. Lithuania (2023), which discovered that dehumanizing rhetoric towards migrants met the severity threshold. The ECtHR’s standards—group vulnerability, assertion content material, and social context [¶52]—have been inconsistently utilized:
Vulnerability: Whereas recognizing Russian LGBTI folks as a marginalized group, the Court docket downplayed their systemic stigmatization in a rustic with rampant anti-LGBTI.
Content material: The video’s violent imagery and express name to “hunt homosexuals” have been minimized as “political commentary,” diverging from Lešník v. Slovakia (2003), the place summary xenophobic statements have been penalized for fostering intolerance.
Context: The video’s launch throughout a constitutional referendum marketing campaign, a interval of heightened anti-LGBTI rhetoric, was deemed a mitigating issue, opposite to Savva Terentyev v. Russia (2018), the place political stress heightened the danger of hurt from hate speech. [See, Dirk Voorhoof here]
Furthermore, the Court docket’s method diverges from ideas established in Vejdeland v. Sweden (2012), the place it dominated that “discrimination primarily based on sexual orientation is as severe as discrimination primarily based on ‘race, origin or color’.” If the video had depicted the searching of racial or ethnic minorities in a supposedly ‘satirical’ context, would the Court docket have been so fast to dismiss its potential influence? This inconsistency raises vital questions on whether or not the Court docket is absolutely making use of its requirements of heightened safety for susceptible teams throughout totally different contexts. The Court docket’s reasoning in M’Bala M’Bala v. France (2015) is instructive. In that case, the Court docket discovered {that a} comedy efficiency containing anti-Semitic parts constituted ‘an indication of hatred and anti-Semitism and help for Holocaust denial’ regardless of its supposedly humorous context. The Court docket acknowledged that ‘beneath the guise of a comic book manufacturing, the Applicant had been utilizing his inventive work as a medium to convey to his viewers ideologies that ran counter to the Conference’s underlying values.’ But within the current case, the Court docket accepted at face worth the declare that the video was merely satirizing homophobia moderately than probably reinforcing it. The ‘threshold of severity’ take a look at as utilized by the Court docket fails to adequately think about the long-term psychological & social influence of dehumanizing portrayals on susceptible communities, as famous within the case of Lewit v. Austria, 2019.
Classes for Future from Previous Critiques
The ECtHR method within the second software echoes critiques highlighted in Handyside v. UK (1976) and Perinçek v. Switzerland (2015), the place the ECtHR’s advert hoc balancing of free speech and dignity led to inconsistent outcomes [See Jacob Mchangama & Natalie Alkiviadou here]. And not using a clearer definition of “severity” or steering on weighing intent versus influence, the Court docket perpetuates ambiguity and inconsistent software of the ideas. A sturdy framework, aligned with the ideas of the Rabat Plan and tailored to the evolving panorama of know-how and on-line speech, would necessitate a complete evaluation of a number of key components. This framework ought to scrutinize the intent behind speech, distinguishing between direct and oblique incitement, to find out if satire serves as a pretext for spreading hatred. Moreover, it ought to assess the imminence of hurt, inspecting proof of incited violence, reminiscent of feedback endorsing violence, to gauge the speech’s potential influence. Moreover, it ought to think about energy dynamics, evaluating how components like a creator’s movie star standing can amplify dangerous stereotypes and exacerbate their results. By integrating these parts, the framework would supply a structured method to evaluating hate speech, making certain that each the context and penalties of on-line content material are totally thought-about.