Spain's far-right Vox party takes Twitter to court over tweet ban
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Flags of Spain and far-right party VOX are seen during a rally in protest against the new coalition government led by Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, at Cibeles Square in Madrid, Spain, January 12, 2020. /Reuters Photo

Flags of Spain and far-right party VOX are seen during a rally in protest against the new coalition government led by Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, at Cibeles Square in Madrid, Spain, January 12, 2020. /Reuters Photo

Spain's ultra-conservative Vox party has filed a criminal complaint in a Spanish court against Twitter, alleging the social media company violated its basic rights by blocking it from tweeting, Vox said on Friday.

Twitter disabled the tweet function on Vox's official account in Spain more than two weeks ago, after – in an apparent reference to a gender equality program for schoolchildren – the account sent out a post accusing the governing Socialists of using public money to encourage paedophilia.

The twitter allegedly wrote: "What we can't stand is for you to come into our house and tell us how we should live and how we should educate our children. And even less if you promote pedophilia with public money."

This Vox tweet was a response to an earlier tweet by Lastra, Socialist Party undersecretary general, who wrote: "They don't support the LGTBI collective, they do not support same-sex marriage, they do not support equality between men and women, they do not support that their retrograde ideas are not those of the whole society. They shouldn't call it freedom; it's hate."

Vox said it had asked the judge to lift the tweet ban while the court decides on whether it will hear the case.

"The attitude of Twitter is violating basic rights such as freedom of expression, the right to political participation, ideological freedom and the principle of political pluralism and equality," the party said in a statement.

The court challenge is the latest in a spate of legal confrontations between tech companies and far-right groups globally, as social media platforms seek to crack down on hate speech and the groups argue their views are being discriminated against.

In a statement sent after the Vox account was restricted, a spokeswoman for Twitter said the post had violated the company's norms. Vox had been notified of the offensive tweet and told that certain functions on its account would be limited until the tweet was deleted.

Twitter said on Friday it had nothing to add to its previous statement.

Vox also disputed Twitter's characterization of its tweet as hate speech, adding the court challenge included an accusation of slander.

Source(s): Reuters