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ECPMF and partner organisations* invite you to an expert talk on
anti-SLAPP solutions,
which will be co-hosted by
David Casa MEP, Stelios Kouloglou MEP and Viola von Cramon-Taubadel MEP.
The talk aims to discuss potential legislative solutions to counter Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPPs) and to find practical solutions for journalists facing SLAPPs. Dr. Justin Borg Barthet (Aberdeen University) will present legal advice concerning the introduction of anti-SLAPP legislation to protect freedom of expression in the European Union.
The event will take place on 12. November 2019 from 18.30 - 21.00.
Venue: European Parliament, ASP A1G2 (access via Simone Veil entrance)
Rue Wiertz 60, 1047, Brussels, Belgium.
Please register for the event
Read the concept note and agenda
Why discuss SLAPPs?

Strategic Litigations Against Public Participation (SLAPPs), refer to cases where the plaintiff, often a large corporation or rich politician, initiates legal proceedings against journalists and other critics to stop investigative research, silence criticism or squash political expression. Their aim is to trap journalists or critics in lengthy and costly procedures. Some SLAPP cases result in financial ruin for the journalists, or the closure of media outlets.
Many journalists face different kinds of SLAPPs in the course of their career. When Maltese investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia was murdered by a car bomb in 2017, the world was shocked. Also shocking were the many defamation lawsuits that were brought against the journalist, some after her death. Her family have now assumed responsibility, according to Maltese law, for fighting these lawsuits. Another journalist facing a SLAPP is Carole Cadwalladr of the Guardian newspaper. Arron Banks, who was a prominent ‘Leave’ campaigner during the Brexit referendum, filed a defamation lawsuit against her. Consequently, Cadwalladr could face a legal bill of at least one million pounds – threatening her with bankruptcy. SLAPPs are also commonplace in the Balkans; take Croatia as just one example. Journalists there are regularly confronted with defamation lawsuits. At the end of 2018, there were almost one thousand ongoing defamation cases against Croatian journalists. 
Last year, in a cross-party initiative MEPs David Casa, Ana Gomes, Monica Macovei, Maite Pagazaurtundúa, Stelios Kouloglou and Benedek Jávor, addressed a letter to the European Commission calling for an EU response to SLAPPs. 
This expert talk follows an earlier meeting led by Aberdeen University, which produced a significant report on the use of regulations to undermine press freedom and the rule of law in the EU. It will bring together journalists, politicians, lawyers, scholars, civil society organisations and other stakeholders. The aim is to create a platform to share and gather expertise on potential anti-SLAPP solutions. In the long run, ECPMF in co-operation with the aforementioned organisations and others, will use the strategies that result from this meeting to convince EU institutions to create mechanisms that would help to limit the abuse of defamation laws.
If you have any questions regarding the event,
we look forward to hearing from you:


press@ecpmf.eu
+49 (0) 341 200 403 13
Please register for the event
*European Federation of Journalists (EFJ), Index on Censorship, Media Legal Defence Initiative (MLDI), Reporters Without Borders (RSF), the International Press Institute (IPI), Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), Free Press Unlimited, Scottish PEN, Global Witness, Article 19, Greenpeace International and PEN International.
The European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF) is a non-profit European Cooperative Society, based in Leipzig, Germany. The ECPMF was founded in 2015 to promote the European Charter on Freedom of the Press throughout Europe. The ECPMF aims to preserve, protect and defend media freedom by monitoring and raising awareness on the state of free media in Europe, providing information on media freedom violations, initiating conferences, fact-finding/advocacy missions or other activities and by providing practical support to journalists at risk.

The ECPMF is supported by: European Commission, Media foundation of Sparkasse Leipzig, Free State of Saxony and the City of Leipzig

Copyright © 2019 ECPMF, All rights reserved.


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European Centre for Press and Media Freedom SCE ltd

Menckestraße 27
04155 Leipzig, Germany

Phone: +49 341 200 403 13
E-Mail: info@ecpmf.eu

Cooperative register of the District Court Leipzig: GnR 534

Executive Board:  

Henrik Kaufholz (Chair),
Stephan Seeger, 
Ljiljana Smajlović,
Mogens Blicher Bjerregårds, 
Galina Arapova

Chair of Supervisory Board:

Lucie Sýkorová

Managing Director:
Dr Lutz Kinkel

www.ecpmf.eu