The author in this thesis deals with issues of limits of permissible criticism that is from the politician’s point of view directed opposed a journalist or a media company. For this very purpose he presents, in the introduction, the perimeter of protecting the freedom of speech which originates from the Article 10 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. The author, at this point, abides relevant decisions of the European Court of Human Rights.
Further on the author extracts and analyses from the verdict, an individual criteria of the European Court of Human Rights used in cases of concurrence between the freedom of speech, protection of reputation and the rights of others. He establishes that the criterion of contribution to a debate on a matter of public concern considering the position of the commenting person has a special value. It is also especially important to differentiate between value judgements and statements of facts wherein the Court in those particular cases acknowledges broad meaning of value judgements which yet have to be based on at least minimum actual standings.
In the continuation the analysis of concrete decisions of the European Court of Human Rights in the proceeding cases is presented with its reciprocal comparison and commentary. The Court follows the maintained general principles and emphasizes the question whether the statement was given within a political debate and if it had a meaning of contribution to a disquisition of a matter of a public concern. At executing the Court thoroughly deals with a context of a statement in a concrete case and among others also considers whether the statement was given as an answer, it deals with the used terms and the manner that the statement was delivered, etc.
In the conclusion the author analyses Slovene jurisdictional practice with the emphasis to the Slovene Court of First Instance in the examined situation. In the author’s opinion the accepted decision of the violation of the Article 10 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms is not at risk.
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