Malta's
Civil Court has found that the Film and Stage Classification Board did not
violate freedom of expression when it banned the play Stitching last
year.
The play, penned by Scottish writer Anthony Neilson, addresses such
themes as death and abortion.
The case was instituted by Adrian Buckle, Christopher Gatt, Maria Pia
Zammit, Mikhail Basmadjian and Unifaun Theatre Productions Ltd against
Teresa Friggieri, the prime minister, the Police commissioner and the
Attorney General.
The producers had pleaded that the banning of the play, in January
last year, violated their fundamental right of freedom of expression.
They also pointed out that the script of the play was freely
available in Malta and the play had been staged in many other European
countries.
They called for the classification of banned to be replaced by
another classification which would enable the play to be staged.
But the court said it had no hesitation in saying that the decision
of the board was correct and according to law:
There was nothing unreasonable in the board
having viewed the play as being offensive to the culture of this country
in its broadest sense.
It was not proper, even in a democratic and
pluralistic society as is Malta's, for the lows of human dignity to be
exalted even on the pretext of showing how a couple could survive a
storm.
One could not make extensive use of language
which was vulgar, obscene and blasphemous and which exalted perversion
and undermined the right to life. Neither could one undermine the
dignity of women including the victims of the holocaust, reduce women to
a simple object of sexual gratification, and ridicule the family.
A civil, democratic, and tolerant society could
not allow its values to be turned upside down simply because there was
freedom of expression.
The court said the board was right to view the
play as exalting perversion as if it was acceptable behaviour.
Bestiality, the stitching up of a vagina as an act of sexual pleasure
and having a woman eat somebody else's excrement, rape and infanticide
were unacceptable, even in a democratic society.
Furthermore, the fact that a person was allowed
to blaspheme in public, even on stage, went against the law.
The court therefore found that there had been
no violation of fundamental human rights as enshrined in the
Constiuttion and the European Convention of Human Rights when the play
was banned.
Appeal
Based on
article
from timesofmalta.com
The producers of the play Stitching have declared that they
will appeal from a Court judgment which upheld a decision by the Stage
and Film Classification Board to ban the production.
The ban had caused an uproar, sparking months of discussion. The
play's producers, Unifaun, had claimed their freedom of expression was
being denied but the court yesterday disagreed. They have said they
would, if necessary, even take the case before the European Court.
An Affront to Freedom
Based on
article
from independent.com.mt
Malta's Front Against Censorship has lashed out at the court's
decision to ban the play Stitching, saying that the play does not
offend public morals because blasphemy and vulgar language are now part
and parcel of adult plays.
The group argued that banning the play verges on the ludicrous, because
people know beforehand what they are letting themselves in for before
attending the play. In a statement, the group further criticised one of
the court's decisions to ban the play because its plotline does not fit
with attitudes and values typical of Maltese society. Since the play was
classified as containing adult material, banning the play outright, when
it has been performed in a host of other countries, is discriminatory
and unacceptable, the group argued.
Front Against Censorship concluded by calling on a new legislation which
would clear the air on what theatrical performances and works of art in
Malta can and should be censored, and what should not.