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Arbeit macht frei: - Fredrick Töben

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The grim cells of London’s Wandsworth prison are a long way away, and<br />

the Holocaust denier is free once more to loudly declare the views that<br />

others find so offensive.<br />

‘The Germans never systematically exterminated anyone - it’s a lie,’ he<br />

says, sipping coffee in a Norwood cafe. ‘I refuse to recant.’<br />

Dr Toben, 64, returned to Adelaide last week after his 50-day stay in<br />

London’s Wandsworth Prison and wasted no time in resuming his<br />

Adelaide Institute newsletter, telling his supporters of his experience.<br />

The former schoolteacher was arrested aboard a plane at Heathrow<br />

airport on October 1 en route to Dubai.<br />

British police were acting on a European Union arrest warrant, issued in<br />

Germany, which accused him of publishing internet material ‘of an anti-<br />

Semitic and/or revisionist nature’.<br />

‘It was a legal ambush,’ Dr Toben told The Australian. ‘I was the test case<br />

for the European arrest warrant.<br />

‘I mentally prepared myself for seven or eight months at Wandsworth ...<br />

we were going to go right through to the House of Lords if we failed at the<br />

lower levels.’<br />

But Dr Toben’s legal team - recruited by former Newcastle beauty queen<br />

and outspoken revisionist supporter Michele Renouf - emerged victorious<br />

after a British judge ruled the arrest warrant invalid.<br />

Dr Toben maintains there are people out to get him.<br />

‘I know they are out to get me because I refuse to believe in their<br />

nonsense,’ he said. ‘Their aim is to criminalise thought.’<br />

His case sparked debate in the British press, with civil libertarians, MPs and<br />

editorials loudly voicing opposition to the German extradition attempt.<br />

‘His opinions are wrong and offensive - but error and offensiveness are<br />

not grounds for banning an opinion, still less for imprisoning the<br />

individual who expresses it,’ wrote London’s The Daily Telegraph.<br />

‘The British legal system should have no part in this process. It is a blatant<br />

attack on free speech.’<br />

Holocaust denial is not a crime in Britain or Australia.<br />

It was not the first time Germany - his homeland - had pursued Dr<br />

Toben. He spent seven months in a Mannheim prison in 1999 for inciting<br />

racism.<br />

With international travel off the cards in the near future in case of further<br />

arrest, Dr Toben remains in Adelaide awaiting a Federal Court judgment<br />

in a civil case against him.<br />

He has pleaded not guilty to 28 charges alleging he breached orders by the<br />

Federal Court in 2002 not to publish offensive material on his website. He<br />

faces a finding of criminal contempt if found guilty.<br />

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/tobenshomeandonoffensive/storye6frg6nf1111118247203<br />

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