Summary table Albania According to the Criminal Code of
Albania, defamation is a crime. Slandering in the knowledge of falsity is subject to fines of from ALL (c. $350) to one million ALL (c. $). If the slandering occurs in public or damages multiple people, the fine is 40,000 ALL to three million ALL (c. $). In addition, defamation of authorities, public officials or foreign representatives (Articles 227, 239 to 241) are separate crimes with maximum penalties varying from one to three years of imprisonment.
Argentina In
Argentina, the crimes of calumny and injury are foreseen in the chapter "Crimes Against Honor" (Articles 109 to 117-bis) of the Penal Code. Calumny is defined as "the false imputation to a determined person of a concrete crime that leads to a lawsuit" (Article 109). However, expressions referring to subjects of public interest or that are not assertive do not constitute calumny. Penalty is a fine from 3,000 to 30,000
pesos. He who intentionally dishonour or discredit a determined person is punished with a penalty from 1,500 to 20,000 pesos (Article 110). He who publishes or reproduces, by any means, calumnies and injuries made by others, will be punished as responsible himself for the calumnies and injuries whenever its content is not correctly attributed to the corresponding source. Exceptions are expressions referring to subjects of public interest or that are not assertive (see Article 113). When calumny or injury are committed through the press, a possible extra penalty is the publication of the judicial decision at the expenses of the guilty (Article 114). He who passes to someone else information about a person that is included in a personal database and that one knows to be false, is punished with six months to three years in prison. When there is harm to somebody, penalties are aggravated by an extra half (Article 117 bis, §§ 2nd and 3rd).
Australia Defamation law in
Australia developed primarily out of the English law of defamation and its cases, though now there are differences introduced by statute and by the implied constitutional limitation on governmental powers to limit speech of a political nature established in
Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation (1997). In 2006, uniform defamation laws came into effect across Australia. In addition to fixing the problematic inconsistencies in law between individual States and Territories, the laws made a number of changes to the common law position, including: • Abolishing the distinction between libel and slander. • Providing new defences including that of triviality, where it is a defence to the publication of a defamatory matter if the defendant proves that the circumstances of publication were such that the plaintiff was unlikely to sustain any harm. The 2006 reforms also established across all Australian states the availability of truth as an unqualified defence; previously a number of states only allowed a defence of truth with the condition that a public interest or benefit existed. The defendant however still needs to prove that the defamatory imputations are substantially true. The law as it currently stands in Australia was summarized in the 2015 case of Duffy v Google by
Justice Blue in the
Supreme Court of South Australia: Defences available to defamation defendants include
absolute privilege,
qualified privilege, justification (truth), honest opinion, publication of public documents, fair report of proceedings of public concern and triviality. The judgment established that internet-published foreign publications that defamed an Australian in their Australian reputation could be held accountable under Australian defamation law. The case gained worldwide attention and is often said, inaccurately, to be the first of its kind. A similar case that predates
Dow Jones v Gutnick is
Berezovsky v Michaels in England. Australia's first
Twitter defamation case to go to trial is believed to be
Mickle v Farley. The defendant, former
Orange High School student Andrew Farley was ordered to pay $105,000 to a teacher for writing defamatory remarks about her on the social media platform. A more recent case in defamation law was
Hockey v Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited [2015], heard in the
Federal Court of Australia. This judgment was significant as it demonstrated that tweets, consisting of even as little as three words, can be defamatory, as was held in this case.
Austria In Austria, the crime of defamation is foreseen by Article 111 of the Criminal Code. Related criminal offences include "slander and assault" (Article 115), that happens "if a person insults, mocks, mistreats or threatens will ill-treatment another one in public", and yet "malicious falsehood" (Article 297), defined as a false accusation that exposes someone to the risk of prosecution.
Azerbaijan In
Azerbaijan, the crime of defamation (Article 147) may result in a fine up to "500 times the amount of
minimum salaries", public work for up to 240 hours, correctional work for up to one year, or imprisonment of up to six months. Penalties are aggravated to up to three years of prison if the victim is falsely accused of having committed a crime "of grave or very grave nature" (Article 147.2). The crime of insult (Article 148) can lead to a fine of up to 1,000 times the minimum wage, or to the same penalties of defamation for public work, correctional work or imprisonment. According to the OSCE report on defamation laws, "Azerbaijan intends to remove articles on defamation and insult from criminal legislation and preserve them in the Civil Code".
Belgium In Belgium, crimes against honour are foreseen in Chapter V of the Belgian Penal Code, Articles 443 to 453-bis. Someone is guilty of calumny "when law admits
proof of the alleged fact" and of defamation "when law does not admit this evidence" (Article 443). The penalty is eight days to one year of imprisonment, plus a fine (Article 444). In addition, the crime of "calumnious denunciation" (Article 445) is punished with 15 days to six months in prison, plus a fine. In any of the crimes covered by Chapter V of the Penal Code, the minimum penalty may be doubled (Article 453-bis) "when one of the motivations of the crime is hatred, contempt or hostility of a person due to his or her
intended race, colour of the skin,
ancestry,
national origin or
ethnicity,
nationality,
gender,
sexual orientation,
marital status, place of birth, age,
patrimony,
philosophical or
religious belief, present or future health condition,
disability,
native language, political belief, physical or genetical characteristic, or
social origin".
Brazil In
Brazil, defamation is a crime, which is prosecuted either as "defamation" (three months to a year in prison, plus fine; Article 139 of the Penal Code), "calumny" (six months to two years in prison, plus fine; Article 138 of the PC) or "injury" (one to six months in prison, or fine; Article 140), with aggravating penalties when the crime is practiced in public (Article 141, item III) or against a state employee because of his regular duties. Incitation to hatred and violence is also foreseen in the Penal Code (incitation to a crime, Article 286). Moreover, in situations like
bullying or moral constraint, defamation acts are also covered by the crimes of "illegal constraint" (Article 146 of the Penal Code) and "arbitrary exercise of discretion" (Article 345 of PC), defined as breaking the law as a
vigilante.
Bulgaria In
Bulgaria, defamation is formally a criminal offence, but the penalty of imprisonment was abolished in 1999. Articles 146 (insult), 147 (criminal defamation) and 148 (public insult) of the Criminal Code prescribe a penalty of fine.
Canada Civil Quebec In
Quebec, defamation was originally grounded in the law inherited from France and is presently established by Chapter III, Title 2 of Book One of the
Civil Code of Quebec, which provides that "every person has a right to the respect of his reputation and privacy". To establish civil liability for defamation, the plaintiff must establish, on a balance of probabilities, the existence of an injury (fault), a wrongful act (damage), and of a causal connection (link of causality) between the two. A person who has made defamatory remarks will not necessarily be civilly liable for them. The plaintiff must further demonstrate that the person who made the remarks committed a wrongful act. Defamation in Quebec is governed by a reasonableness standard, as opposed to strict liability; a defendant who made a false statement would not be held liable if it was reasonable to believe the statement was true.
Criminal The
Criminal Code of Canada specifies the following as criminal offences: •
Defamatory libel, defined as "matter published, without lawful justification or excuse, that is likely to injure the
reputation of any person by exposing him to hatred, contempt or ridicule, or that is designed to insult the person of or concerning whom it is published", receives the same penalty. • A "libel known to be false" is an
indictable offence, for which the prison term is a maximum of five years. The criminal portion of the law has been rarely applied, but it has been observed that, when treated as an indictable offence, it often appears to arise from statements made against an agent of the Crown, such as a
police officer, a
corrections officer, or a
Crown attorney. In the most recent case, in 2012, an Ottawa restaurant owner was convicted of ongoing online harassment of a customer who had complained about the quality of food and service in her restaurant. According to the OSCE official report on defamation laws issued in 2005, 57 persons in Canada were accused of defamation, libel and insult, among which 23 were convicted – 9 to prison sentences, 19 to
probation and one to a fine. The average period in prison was 270 days, and the maximum sentence was four years of imprisonment.
Online The rise of the internet as a medium for publication and the expression of ideas, including the emergence of social media platforms transcending national boundaries, has proven challenging to reconcile with traditional notions of defamation law. Questions of jurisdiction and conflicting limitation periods in trans-border online defamation cases, liability for hyperlinks to defamatory content, filing lawsuits against anonymous parties, and the liability of internet service providers and intermediaries make online defamation a uniquely complicated area of law. In 2011, the
Supreme Court of Canada held that a person who posts hyperlinks on a website which lead to another site with defamatory content is not publishing that defamatory material for the purposes of libel and defamation law.
Chile In
Chile, the crimes of calumny and slanderous allegation () are covered by Articles 412 to 431 of the Penal Code. Calumny is defined as "the false imputation of a determined crime and that can lead to a public prosecution" (Article 412). If the calumny is written and with publicity, penalty is "lower imprisonment" in its medium degree plus a fine of 11 to 20 "vital wages" when it refers to a crime, or "lower imprisonment" in its minimum degree plus a fine of six to ten "vital wages" when it refers to a
misdemeanor (Article 413). If it is not written or with publicity, penalty is "lower imprisonment" in its minimum degree plus a fine of six to fifteen "vital wages" when it is about a crime, or plus a fine of six to ten "vital wages" when it is about a misdemeanor (Article 414). According to Article 25 of the Penal Code, "lower imprisonment" is defined as a prison term between 61 days and five years. According to Article 30, the penalty of "lower imprisonment" in its medium or minimum degrees carries with it also the suspension of the exercise of a public position during the prison term. Article 416 defines as "all expression said or action performed that dishonors, discredits or causes contempt". Article 417 defines broadly (grave slander), including the imputation of a crime or misdemeanor that cannot lead to public prosecution, and the imputation of a vice or lack of morality, which are capable of harming considerably the reputation, credit or interests of the offended person. "Grave slander" in written form or with publicity are punished with "lower imprisonment" in its minimum to medium degrees plus a fine of eleven to twenty "vital wages". Calumny or slander of a deceased person (Article 424) can be prosecuted by the spouse, children, grandchildren, parents, grandparents, siblings and
heirs of the offended person. Finally, according to Article 425, in the case of calumnies and slander published in foreign newspapers, are considered liable all those who from Chilean territory sent articles or gave orders for publication abroad, or contributed to the introduction of such newspapers in Chile with the intention of propagating the calumny and slander.
China Civil Based on text from
Wikisource:
Civil Code of the People's Republic of China, "Book Four" ("Personality Rights"). "Chapter I" ("General rules"): • Personality rights: reputation, honour, privacy, dignity (Art. 990) • Protection of personality rights (Arts. 991993) • Personality rights of the deceased (Art. 994) • Liability for infringement; and requests to stop, restore reputation, offer apology (Arts. 9951000) "Chapter V" ("Rights to Reputation and Rights to Honor"): • Right to reputation, protection from defamation and insults (Art. 1024) • Reputation includes moral character, prestige, talent, credit • Liability for fact fabrication, distortion, lack of verification, misrepresentation, insults (Art. 1025) • Verification considerations, source credibility, controversial information, timeliness,
public order and
morals (Art. 1026) • Depictions of real people and events, in literary and artistic works (Art. 1027) • Right to request correction or deletion (Art. 1028) • Right to request correction or deletion, for incorrect
credit reports (Arts. 1029, 1030) • Honorary titles and awards: protection, recording, correction (Art. 1031)
Criminal Article 246 of the
Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China (
中华人民共和国刑法) makes serious defamation punishable by fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years or criminal detention upon complaint, unless it is against the government.
Croatia In
Croatia, the crime of insult prescribes a penalty of up to three months in prison, or a fine of "up to 100 daily incomes" (Criminal Code, Article 199). If the crime is committed in public, penalties are aggravated to up to six months of imprisonment, or a fine of "up to 150 daily incomes" (Article 199–2). Moreover, the crime of defamation occurs when someone affirms or disseminates false facts about other person that can damage his reputation. The maximum penalty is one year in prison, or a fine of up to 150 daily incomes (Article 200–1). If the crime is committed in public, the prison term can reach one year (Article 200–2). On the other hand, according to Article 203, there is an exemption for the application of the aforementioned articles (insult and defamation) when the
specific context is that of a
scientific work,
literary work,
work of art, public information conducted by a politician or a government official,
journalistic work, or the defence of a right or the protection of justifiable interests, in all cases
provided that the conduct was not aimed at damaging someone's reputation.
Czech Republic According to the Czech Criminal Code, Article 184, defamation is a crime. Penalties may reach a maximum prison term of one year (Article 184–1) or, if the crime is committed through the press, film, radio, TV, publicly accessible computer network, or by "similarly effective" methods, the offender may stay in prison for up to two years or be prohibited of exercising a specific activity. However, only the most severe cases will be subject to criminal prosecution. The less severe cases can be solved by an action for apology, damages or injunctions.
Denmark In Denmark, libel is a crime, as defined by Article 267 of the Danish Criminal Code, with a penalty of up to six months in prison or a fine, with proceedings initiated by the victim. In addition, Article 266-b prescribes a maximum prison term of two years in the case of public defamation aimed at a group of persons because of their race, colour, national or ethnic origin, religion or "sexual inclination".
Finland In Finland, defamation is a crime, according to the
Criminal Code (Chapter 24, Sections 9 and 10), punishable with a fine, or, if aggravated, with up to two years' imprisonment or a fine. Defamation is defined as spreading a false report or insinuation apt to cause harm to a person, or otherwise disparaging someone. Defamation of the deceased may also constitute an offence if apt to cause harm to surviving loved ones. In addition, there is a crime called "dissemination of information violating personal privacy" (Chapter 24, Section 8), which consists in disseminating information, even accurate, in a way that is apt to harm someone's right to privacy. Information that may be relevant with regard to a person's conduct in public office, in business, or in a comparable position, or of information otherwise relevant to a matter of public interest, is not covered by this prohibition. Finnish criminal law has no provisions penalizing the defamation of corporate entities, only of natural persons.
France Civil While defamation law in most jurisdictions centres on the protection of individuals' dignity or reputation, defamation law in
France is particularly rooted in protecting the privacy of individuals. While the broader scope of the rights protected make defamation cases easier to prove in France than, for example, in England; awards in defamation cases are significantly lower and it is common for courts to award symbolic damages as low as €1. While the only statutory defence available under French defamation law is to demonstrate the truth of the defamatory statement in question, a defence that is unavailable in cases involving an individual's personal life; French courts have recognized three additional exceptions: • References to matters over ten years old • References to a person's pardoned or expunged criminal record • A plea of good faith, which may be made if the statement • pursues a legitimate aim • is not driven by animosity or malice • is prudent and measured in presentation • is backed by a serious investigation that dutifully sought to ascertain the truth of the statement.
Criminal stands in court during the cases of
character defamation by the barrister Maître Barboux, and the
Prince of Sagan's assault on Barboux. Defined as "the allegation or [the] allocation of a fact that damages the honor or reputation of the person or body to which the fact is imputed". A defamatory allegation is considered an insult if it does not include any facts or if the claimed facts cannot be verified.
Germany In German law, there is no distinction between libel and slander. , German defamation lawsuits are increasing. The relevant offences of Germany's
Criminal Code are §90 (denigration of the Federal President), §90a (denigration of the [federal] State and its symbols), §90b (unconstitutional denigration of the organs of the Constitution), §185 ("insult"), §186 (defamation of character), §187 (defamation with deliberate untruths), §188 (political defamation with increased penalties for offending against paras 186 and 187), §189 (denigration of a deceased person), §192 ("insult" with true statements). Other sections relevant to prosecution of these offences are §190 (criminal conviction as proof of truth), §193 (no defamation in the pursuit of rightful interests), §194 (application for a criminal prosecution under these paragraphs), §199 (mutual insult allowed to be left unpunished), and §200 (method of proclamation).
Greece In Greece, the maximum prison term for defamation, libel or insult was five years, while the maximum fine was €15,000. The crime of insult (Article 361, § 1, of the Penal Code) may have led to up to one year of imprisonment or a fine, while unprovoked insult (Article 361-A, § 1) was punished with at least three months in prison. In addition, defamation may have resulted in up to two months in prison or a fine, while aggravated defamation could have led to at least three months of prison, plus a possible fine (Article 363) and deprivation of the offender's
civil rights. Finally, disparaging the memory of a deceased person is punished with imprisonment of up to six months (Penal Code, Article 365).
India In India, a defamation case can be filed under either
criminal law or
civil law, or both. According to the
Constitution of India, the
fundamental right to free speech (Article 19) is subject to "reasonable restrictions": Accordingly, for the purpose of
criminal defamation, "reasonable restrictions" are defined in Section 499 of the
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (Section 499 of Indian Penal Code has now been replaced by Section 356 of Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita). This section defines defamation and provides ten valid exceptions when a statement is not considered to be defamation. It says that defamation takes place, when someone "by words either spoken or intended to be read, or by signs or by visible representations, makes or publishes any imputation concerning any person intending to harm, or knowing or having reason to believe that such imputation will harm, the reputation of such person". The punishment is simple imprisonment for up to two years, or a fine, or both (Section 500). Some other offences related to false allegations: false statements regarding elections (Section 171G), false
information (Section 182), false claims in court (Section 209), false
criminal charges (Section 211). Some other offences related to insults: against public servants in judicial proceedings (Section 228), against religion or religious beliefs (
Section 295A), against religious feelings (Section 298), against breach of peace (Section 504), against modesty of women (Section 509). According to the
Indian Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 defamation is prosecuted only upon a complaint (within six months from the act) (Section 199), and is a
bailable,
non-cognisable and compoundable offence (See: The First Schedule, Classification of Offences).
Ireland According to the (revised) Defamation Act 2009, the last criminal offences (Sections 3637, blasphemy) seem to have been repealed. The
statute of limitations is one year from the time of first publication (may be extended to two years by the courts) (Section 38). The 2009 Act repeals the Defamation Act 1961, which had, together with the underlying principles of the common law of tort, governed Irish defamation law for almost half a century. The 2009 Act represents significant changes in Irish law, as many believe that it previously attached insufficient importance to the media's freedom of expression and weighed too heavily in support of the individual's right to a good name.
Israel According to
Defamation Prohibition Law (1965), defamation can constitute either civil or criminal offence. As a civil offence, defamation is considered a tort case and the court may award a compensation of up to to the person targeted by the defamation, while the plaintiff does not have to prove a material damage. As a criminal offence, defamation is punishable by a year of imprisonment. In order to constitute a felony, defamation must be intentional and target at least two persons.
Italy In Italy, there used to be different crimes against honour. The crime of injury (Article 594 of the Penal Code) referred to the act of offending someone's honour in their presence and was punishable with up to six months in prison or a fine of up to €516. The crime of defamation (Article 595, Penal Code) refers to any other situation involving offending one's reputation before many persons, and is punishable with a penalty of up to a year in prison or up to €1,032 in fine, doubled to up to two years in prison or a fine of €2,065 if the offence consists in the attribution of a determined fact. When the offence happens by the means of the press or by any other means of publicity, or in a public demonstration, the penalty is of imprisonment from six months to three years, or a fine of at least €516. Both of them were crimes, that is, the victim had the right of choosing, in any moment, to stop the criminal prosecution by withdrawing the (a formal complaint), or even prosecute the fact only with a civil action with no and therefore no criminal prosecution at all. Beginning from 15 January 2016, injury is no longer a crime but a tort, while defamation is still considered a crime like before. Article 31 of the Penal Code establishes that crimes committed with
abuse of power or with abuse of a profession or
art, or with the violation of a duty inherent to that profession or art, lead to the additional penalty of a temporary
ban in the exercise of that profession or art. Therefore, journalists convicted of libel may be banned from exercising their profession. Deliberately false accusations of defamation, as with any other crime, lead to the crime of ("
calumny", Article 368, Penal Code), which, under the Italian legal system, is defined as the crime of falsely accusing, before the authorities, a person of a crime they did not commit. As to the trial, judgment on the legality of the evidence fades into its relevance.
Japan The
Constitution of Japan reads:
Civil Under article 723 of the Japanese Civil Code, a court is empowered to order a tortfeasor in a defamation case to "take suitable measures for the restoration of the [plaintiff's] reputation either in lieu of or together with compensation for damages". An example of a civil defamation case in Japan can be found at Japan civil court finds against ZNTIR President Yositoki (Mitsuo) Hataya and Yoshiaki.
Criminal The
Penal Code of Japan (translation from government, but still not official text) seems to prescribe these related offences: Article 92, "Damage to a Foreign National Flag". Seems relevant to the extent that the wording: "...defiles the national flag or other national emblem of a foreign state for the purpose of insulting the foreign state", can be construed to include more abstract defiling; translations of the Japanese term (, ) include 'defacing'. Article 172, "False Accusations". That is, false
criminal charges (as in
complaint,
indictment, or
information). Article 188, "Desecrating Places of Worship; Interference with Religious Service". The Japanese term (, ) seems to include any act of 'disrespect' and 'blasphemy'a standard term; as long as it is performed in a place of worship. Articles 230 and 230-2, "Defamation" (, ). General defamation provision. Where the truth of the allegations is not a factor in determining guilt; but there is "Special Provision for Matters Concerning Public Interest", whereby proving the allegations is allowed as a defence. See also 232: "prosecuted only upon complaint". Article 231, "Insults" (, ). General insult provision. See also 232: "prosecuted only upon complaint". Article 233, "Damage to Credibility; Obstruction of Business". Special provision for damaging the reputation of, or 'confidence' (, ) in, the business of another. For a sample penal defamation case, see also on
Wikisource. The defence alleged, among other things, violation of Article 21 of the Constitution. The court found that none of the defence's grounds for appeal amounted to lawful grounds for a final appeal. Nevertheless, the court examined the case , and found procedural illegalities in the lower courts' judgments (regarding the exclusion of evidence from testimony, as hearsay). As a result, the court quashed the conviction on appeal, and remanded the case to a lower court for further proceedings.
Malaysia In Malaysia, defamation is both a tort and a criminal offence meant to protect the reputation and good name of a person. The principal statutes relied upon are the Defamation Act 1957 (Revised 1983) and the Penal Code. Following the practice of other common law jurisdictions like the United Kingdom, Singapore, and India, Malaysia relies on case law. In fact, the Defamation Act 1957 is similar with the English Defamation Act 1952. The Malaysian Penal Code is with the Indian and Singaporean Penal Codes.
Mexico In Mexico, crimes of calumny, defamation and slanderous allegation () have been abolished in the Federal Penal Code as well as in fifteen states. These crimes remain in the penal codes of seventeen states, where penalty is, in average, from 1.1 years (for ones convicted for slanderous allegation) to 3.8 years in jail (for those convicted for calumny).
Netherlands In the Netherlands, defamation is mostly dealt with by lodging a civil complaint at the District Court. Article 167 of book 6 of the
Civil Code holds: "When someone is liable towards another person under this Section because of an incorrect or, by its incompleteness, misleading publication of information of factual nature, the court may, upon a right of action (legal claim) of this other person, order the tortfeasor to publish a correction in a way to be set by court." If the court grants an injunction, the defendant is usually ordered to delete the publication or to publish a rectification statement.
Norway In Norway, defamation was a crime punished with imprisonment of up to six months or a fine (Penal Code, Chapter 23, § 246). When the offence is likely to harm one's "good name" and reputation, or exposes him to hatred, contempt or loss of confidence, the maximum prison term went up to one year, and if the defamation happens in print, in broadcasting or through an especially aggravating circumstance, imprisonment may have reached two years (§ 247). When the offender acts "against his better judgment", he was liable to a maximum prison term of three years (§ 248). According to § 251, defamation lawsuits must be initiated by the offended person, unless the defamatory act was directed to an indefinite group or a large number of persons, when it may also have been prosecuted by public authorities. Under the new Penal Code, decided upon by the Parliament in 2005, defamation would cease to exist as a crime. Rather, any person who believes he or she has been subject to defamation will have to press civil lawsuits. The Criminal Code took effect on 1 October 2015.
Philippines Criminal According to the
Revised Penal Code of the
Philippines ("Title Thirteen", "Crimes Against Honor"): • Malice presumed, even if true; exceptions: private communications in the course of duty, fair reportswithout commentson official proceedings (Art. 354) • Punishment for libel in writing or similar medium (including radio, painting, theatre, cinema): imprisonment, fine, civil action (Art. 355) • Threat to publish libel concerning one's family, for extracting money (Art. 356) • Publication in
the press of private-life factsconnected to official proceedingsoffending virtue, honour, reputation (Art. 357) • Slanderoral defamation (Art. 358) • Slander by deed"any act not included and punished in this title, which shall cast dishonour, discredit or contempt upon another person" (Art. 359) • Responsibility for dissemination; same as for authorship (Art. 360) • Conditions for defence of truth: good motives, justifiable ends; not available for allegations of non-criminal activitiesunless related to official duties of government employees (Art. 361) • Malicious comments cancel the exceptions of Art. 354 (Art. 362) • Incriminating an innocent person (Art. 363) • Intrigue against honour or reputation (Art. 364) Related articles: • Aggravating circumstances (Art. 14) • Crime committed in contempt of, or with insult to, public authorities (¶ 2) • Act committed with insult or disrespect, regarding rank, age, or sex (¶ 3) • Intentionally causing
ignominy, in addition to other effects of the act (¶ 17) • Statute of limitations: Two years for libel, six months for slander, two months for light offences (Art. 90) • Offending religious feelingsin places of worship, or during religious ceremonies (Art. 133) • Disrespectful behaviour towards legislature or related bodies, during their proceedings (Art. 144) • "Unlawful use of means of publication" (Art. 154) • Publication of malicious
fake news, endangering public order, or damaging state interests or credit (¶ 1) • False testimony against defendant, in criminal cases (Art. 180) • Spreading false rumours, when aiming to monopolize or restrain trade (Art. 186 ¶ 2) • Lesser physical injury, when intended to insult, offend, cause ignominy (Art. 265 ¶ 2) • Threats to harm honoure.g. for extracting money (Art. 282) In January 2012,
The Manila Times published an article on a criminal defamation case. A broadcaster was jailed for more than two years, following conviction on libel charges, by the
Regional Trial Court of
Davao. The radio broadcast dramatized a newspaper report regarding former speaker
Prospero Nograles, who subsequently filed a complaint. Questioned were the conviction's compatibility with freedom of expression, and the
trial in absentia. The United Nations Human Rights Committee recalled its
General comment No. 34, and ordered the Philippine government to provide remedy, including compensation for time served in prison, and to prevent similar violations in the future.
Online In 2012, the Philippines enacted Republic Act 10175, titled
Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012. Essentially, this Act provides that libel is criminally punishable and describes it as: "Libel – the unlawful or prohibited act as defined in Article 355 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended, committed through a computer system or any other similar means which may be devised in the future." Professor Harry Roque of the University of the Philippines has written that under this law, electronic libel is punished with imprisonment from six years and one day to up to twelve years. , five petitions claiming the law to be unconstitutional had been filed with the Philippine Supreme Court, one by Senator
Teofisto Guingona III. The petitions all claim that the law infringes on freedom of expression, due process, equal protection and privacy of communication.
Poland In Poland, defamation is a crime that consists of accusing someone of a
conduct that may degrade him in
public opinion or expose him "to the loss of confidence necessary for a given position, occupation or type of activity". Penalties include fine, limitation of liberty and imprisonment for up to a year (Article 212.1 of the Criminal Code). The penalty is more severe when the offence happens through the
media (Article 212.2). When the insult is public and aims at offending a group of people or an individual because of his or their
nationality, ethnicity, race, religion or lack of religion, the maximum prison term is three years.
Portugal In Portugal, defamation crimes are: "defamation" (article 180 of the
Penal Code; up to six months in prison, or a fine of up to 240 days), "injuries" (art. 181; up to three months in prison, or a fine up to 120 days), and "offence to the memory of a deceased person" (art. 185; up to 6 months in prison or a fine of up 240 days). Penalties are aggravated in cases with publicity (art. 183; up to two years in prison or at least 120 days of fine) and when the victim is an authority (art.184; all other penalties aggravated by an extra half). There is yet the extra penalty of "public knowledge of the court decision" (costs paid by the defamer) (art. 189 of Penal Code) and also the crime of "incitement of a crime" (article 297; up to three years in prison, or fine).
Romania Since 2014, defamation is no longer criminalized in the country.
Saudi Arabia In
Saudi Arabia, defamation of the state, or a past or present ruler, is punishable under
terrorism legislation. In a 2015 case, a Saudi writer was arrested for defaming a former ruler of the country. Reportedly, under a [2014] counterterrorism law, "actions that 'threaten Saudi Arabia's unity, disturb public order, or defame the reputation of the state or the king' are considered acts of terrorism. The law decrees that a suspect can be held incommunicado for 90 days without the presence of their lawyer during the initial questioning."
Singapore In
Singapore, Division 2 of Part 3 of the
Protection from Harassment Act 2014 provides for individuals who have been affected by false statements online to seek a variety of court orders under the tort of harassment that are not available under the pre-internet tort of defamation: • Stop Publication Order (an order requiring the tortfeasor to stop making the defamatory statement) • Correction Order (an order for the tortfeasor to publish a correction of the statement) • Disabling Order (an order requiring an internet-based intermediaries to disable access to the defamatory statement). This is distinct from and does not affect plaintiffs right of action under the common law torts of libel and slander as modified by the Defamation Act 1957. The Protection of Harassment Act 2014, which provides for criminal penalties in addition to civil remedies, is specifically designed to address a narrower scope of conduct in order to avoid outlawing an overly broad range of speech, and is confined to addressing speech that causes "harassment, alarm, or distress". The penalties increase for false statements. It is also possible for a person to be criminally defamed when they are no longer alive. Criminal defamation occurs when a public statement damages the subject's reputation, unless the statement was true and presented solely for the
public interest. In January 2009, according to an article in
The Korea Times, a
Seoul court approved the arrest of online financial commentator
Minerva, for spreading false information. According to the decision, Minerva's online comments affected national credibility negatively. Lawmakers from the ruling
Grand National Party proposed a
bill, that would allow imprisonment up to three years for online defamation, and would authorize the police to investigate cyber defamation cases without prior
complaint. In September 2015, according to an article in
Hankook Ilbo, submitted complaints for insults during online games were increasing. Complainants aimed for
settlement money, wasting the investigative capacity of police departments. One person could end up suing 50 others, or more. This led to the emergence of settlement-money hunters, provoking others to insult them, and then demanding compensation. According to statistics from the Cyber Security Bureau of the
National Police Agency, the number of cyber defamation and insult reports was 5,712 in 2010, 8,880 in 2014, and at least 8,488 in 2015. More than half of the complaints for cyber insults were game-related (the article mentions
League of Legends specifically). Most of the accused were teenagers. Parents often paid settlement fees, ranging from 300,000 to 2,000,000
South Korean won (US$3002000 as of 2015), to save their children from getting
criminal records.
Former Soviet Union In the former
Soviet Union, defamatory insults can "only constitute a criminal offence, not a civil wrong".
Spain In Spain, the crime of calumny (Article 205 of the
Penal Code) consists of accusing someone of a crime knowing the falsity of the accusation, or with a reckless
contempt for truth. Penalties for cases with publicity are imprisonment from six months to two years or a fine of 12 to 24 months-fine, and for other cases only a fine of six to twelve months-fine (Article 206). Additionally, the crime of injury (Article 208 of the Penal Code) consists of hurting someone's
dignity, depreciating his reputation or injuring his
self-esteem, and is only applicable if the offence, by its nature, effects and circumstances, is considered by the general public as strong. Injury has a penalty of fine from three to seven months-fine, or from six to fourteen months-fine when it is strong and with publicity. According to Article 216, an additional penalty to calumny or injury may be imposed by the judge, determining the publication of the judicial decision (in a newspaper) at the expenses of the defamer.
Sweden In Sweden, denigration () is criminalized by Chapter 5 of the Criminal Code. Article 1 regulates defamation () and consists of pointing out someone as a criminal or as "having a reprehensible way of living", or of providing information about them "intended to cause exposure to the disrespect of others". The penalty is a fine. It is generally not a requirement that the statements are untrue; it is enough if they statements are meant to be vilifying. Article 2 regulates
gross defamation () and has a penalty of up to two years in prison or a fine. In judging if the crime is gross, the court should consider whether the information, because of its content or the scope of its dissemination, is calculated to produce "serious damage".
Switzerland In
Switzerland, the crime of wilful defamation is punished with a maximum term of three years in prison, or with a fine of at least thirty days' worth, according to Article 174-2 of the
Swiss Criminal Code. There is wilful defamation when the offender knows the falsity of his/her allegations and intentionally looks to ruin the reputation of one's victim (see Articles 174-1 and 174–2). On the other hand, defamation is punished only with a maximum monetary penalty of 180 daily penalty units (Article 173–1). When it comes to a deceased or absent person, the
statute of limitations is 30 years (after the death).
Taiwan Civil According to the Civil Code of the
Republic of China. "Part I General Principles", "Chapter II Persons", "Section I Natural Persons": • Personality (and name) infringement; prevention, removal, damages for
emotional distress (Arts. 18, 19) "Part II Obligations", "Chapter I General Provisions" "Section 1Sources of Obligations", "Sub-section 5 Torts": • General: Compensation for damaging the rights of another (Art. 184) • Damage to reputation, credit, privacy, chastity, personality (Art. 195) • Compensation even if loss is not purely pecuniary • Measures to restore reputation •
Statute of limitations: Two years after injury and tortfeasor known, otherwise ten years from the act (Art. 197) "Section 3Effects Of Obligations", "Sub-section 1 Performance": • Injury to personality of creditor, by debtor's non-performance; compensation (Art. 227-1)
Criminal The Criminal Code of the
Republic of China (
中華民國刑法), under "Chapter 27 Offenses Against Reputation and Credit", lists these articles: • Insults (Art. 309) • Slander and libel as distinct offences, with harsher punishment for libel; truth as a defenceexcept for private matters (Art. 310) • Defences related to protection of legal interests, reports on public matters, and fair comments (Art. 311) • Insult and defamation of the deceased (Art. 312) • Damage to credibility, with increased penalties when done via the media or the Internet (Art. 313) • Offences only prosecuted upon
complaint (Art. 314) Other related articles: • Increased punishment for injuring the reputation of heads and representatives of friendly states (Art. 116) • Insults against foreign states, by dishonouring flags or emblems (Art. 118) • Insults against public officials (Art. 140) • Insults against public officials, combined with physical damage to proclamations (Art. 141) • Insult against the state, by dishonouring the flag, emblem, or portraits of its
founder (Art. 160) • Insulting religious or memorial sites (Art. 246) • Insulting the remains of deceased persons (Art. 247) • Insulting the remains of deceased persons, in combination with gravedigging (Art. 249) • Threat to injure the reputation of another, if it endangered their safety (Art. 305) In July 2000, the Justices of the
Judicial Yuan (
司法院大法官)the Constitutional Court of Taiwan delivered the
J.Y. Interpretation No. 509 ("The Defamation Case"). They upheld the constitutionality of Art. 310 of the Criminal Code. In the
Constitution, Article 11 establishes freedom of speech. Article 23 allows restrictions to freedoms and rights, to prevent infringing on the freedoms and rights of others. The court found that Art. 310 ¶¶ 1-2 were necessary and
proportional to protect reputation, privacy, and the public interest. It seemed to extend the defence of truth in ¶ 3, to providing evidence that a perpetrator had reasonable grounds in believing the allegations were true (even if they could not ultimately be proven). Regarding criminal punishments versus civil remedies, it noted that if the law allowed anyone to avoid a penalty for defamation by offering monetary compensation, it would be tantamount to issuing them a licence to defame. In January 2022, an editorial in the
Taipei Times (written by a law student from the
National Chengchi University) argued against Articles 309 and 310. Its position was abolishing prison sentences in practice, on the way to full decriminalization. It argued that insulting language should be tackled via
education, and not in the courts (with the exception of
hate speech). According to the article, 180
prosecutors urged the
Legislative Yuan to decriminalize defamation, or at least limit it to
private prosecutions (in order to reserve public resources for major crimes, rather than private disputes and quarrels irrelevant to the public interest). In June 2023, the Constitutional Court delivered its judgment
Case on the Criminalization of Defamation II. The court dismissed all the complaints and upheld the constitutionality of the disputed provisions. It emphasized that excluding the application of substantial truth doctrine on defamatory speeches concerning private matters with no public concern, is proportionate in protecting the victim's reputation and privacy. The court reaffirmed
J.Y. Interpretation No. 509 and further supplemented its decision. It elaborated on the offender's duty to check the validity of the defamatory statements regarding public matters, and dictated that the offender shall not be punished if there are objective and reasonable grounds for the offender to believe the defamatory statement is true. The court ruled that untrue defamatory statements concerning public matters shall not be punished unless they are issued under actual malice. This includes situations where the offender knowingly or under gross negligence issued said defamatory statement. In terms of the burden of proof for actual malice, the court ruled that it shall be on the prosecutor or the accuser. To prevent fake news from eroding the marketplace of ideas, the court pointed out that the media (including mass media, social media, and self-media) shall be more thorough than the general public in fact-checking.
Thailand Civil The Civil and Commercial Code of Thailand provides that: In practice, defamation law in Thailand has been found by the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to be facilitate
hostile and vexatious litigation by business interests seeking to suppress criticism.
Criminal The
Thai Criminal Code provides that: Criminal defamation charges in Thailand under Section 326 of the Criminal Code are frequently used to censor journalists and activists critical of human rights circumstances for workers in the country. There were only a few instances of the criminal libel law being applied. Notably, the Italian anarchist
Errico Malatesta was convicted of criminal libel for denouncing the Italian state agent Ennio Belelli in 1912. Under
English common law, proving the truth of the allegation was originally a valid defence only in civil libel cases. Criminal libel was construed as an offence against the public at large based on the tendency of the libel to provoke
breach of peace, rather than being a crime based upon the actual defamation
per se; its veracity was therefore considered irrelevant. Section 6 of the
Libel Act 1843 allowed the proven truth of the allegation to be used as a valid defence in criminal libel cases, but only if the defendant also demonstrated that publication was for the "public benefit".
United States Criminal Fewer than half of
U.S. states have criminal defamation laws, but the applicability of those laws is limited by the
First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and the laws are rarely enforced. There are no criminal defamation or insult laws at the federal level. On the state level, 23 states and two territories have criminal defamation laws on the books:
Alabama,
Florida,
Idaho,
Illinois,
Kansas,
Kentucky,
Louisiana,
Massachusetts,
Michigan,
Minnesota,
Mississippi,
Montana,
Nevada,
New Hampshire,
New Mexico,
North Carolina,
North Dakota,
Oklahoma,
South Carolina,
Texas,
Utah,
Virginia,
Wisconsin,
Puerto Rico and
Virgin Islands. In addition,
Iowa criminalizes defamation through
case law without statutorily defining it as a crime.
Noonan v. Staples is sometimes cited as precedent that truth is not always a defence to libel in the U.S., but the case is actually not valid precedent on that issue because Staples did not argue First Amendment protection, which is one theory for truth as complete defence, for its statements. The court assumed in this case that the Massachusetts law was constitutional under the First Amendment without it being argued by the parties.
Online In response to the expansion of other jurisdictions' attempts to enforce judgements in cases of trans-border defamation and to a rise in domestic
strategic lawsuits against public participation (SLAPPs) following the rise of the internet, the federal and many state governments have adopted statutes limiting the enforceability of offshore defamation judgments and expediting the dismissal of defamation claims. American writers and publishers are shielded from the enforcement of offshore libel judgments not compliant under the
SPEECH Act, which was passed by the
111th United States Congress and signed into law by President
Barack Obama in 2010. It is based on the New York State
2008 Libel Terrorism Protection Act (also known as "Rachel's Law", after
Rachel Ehrenfeld who initiated the state and federal laws). Both the New York state law and the federal law were passed unanimously.
Venezuela In March 2016, a civil action for defamation led to imposition of a four-year prison sentence on a newspaper publisher.
Yemen In 2024 Judge and member of the
Supreme Judicial Council,
Sabah al-Alwani was the subject of an online defamation campaign. ==UNESCO reports==