COMEDIAN
OCTOBER 27 2009 15:53h
Costa Cruises: We are very sorry and deeply saddened
Text
The comic admitted at the hearing that the show had been a "comedy bomb attack" but defended his right to free expression.
French judges ordered a far-right black comedian to pay 20,000 euros (30,000 dollars) Tuesday over an anti-Semitic stunt during a stage show in which he invited a notorious Holocaust denier onto stage.
The Paris court fined Dieudonne M'bala M'bala, a 43-year-old French stand up, 10,000 euros for his "public anti-Semitic insults" and told him to pay a further 10,000 in damages and legal fees to organisations that sued him.
He was prosecuted after he invited Robert Faurisson, an academic who has been convicted of Holocaust denial, onto stage during a Paris comedy show to receive a satirical award from an actor dressed as a Jewish deportee.
The comic admitted at the hearing that the show had been a "comedy bomb attack" but defended his right to free expression. Anti-racism and Jewish defence organisations welcomed the verdict.
Dieudonne, a former anti-racism campaigner whose father was Cameroonian, often courts controversy and this year tried to enter politics by standing for the European parliament as head of an "anti-Zionist" party.
In September 2007, Dieudonne was fined after he accused Jews of exploiting "memorial pornography" and attacked a - Zionist lobby which cultivates the idea of their unique suffering ... and has declared war on the black world. -
Two months later he was back in court and was fined 5,000 euros for having compared Jews to "slave-traders".
He remains under investigation over a video circulating on the Internet in which he appears to attack a "yid Zionist lobby" led by "racist liars".
For June's European election, Dieudonne and Alain Soral, a former member of Jean-Marie Le Pen's National Front, formed a party to argue that the world's ills are caused by Zionist Jews and their Anglo-Saxon allies.
Officials expressed fears that the comedian's campaign might stir communal tensions in France's notoriously combustible city suburbs, but the party won only 1.3 percent of votes in the Paris region and had little impact.
Comment
Lawmakers defeat pro-Tymoshenko bill
Number of missing Libyan missiles unknown
Iran warns against military action


Israel Separation Barrier Bethelehem
Pro-Putin electtion rally in Moscow
Young Fan Throws Football During Super Bowl XLVI N
Iran Oil Minister holds News Conference in Tehran,
Rare visitors from the Artic, Snowy Owls, make ap
Monlam festival begins at the Labrang Monastery in
Actor Jason Segel shows off pudding pot at Harvard
Cost of Living Rises in Iran
Obama visits Fire station in Arlington
Protesters Clashes With Security Forces in Egypt
WORLD REPORT
WORLD REPORT
WORLD REPORT