Dutch appeals court convicts Geert Wilders of insulting Moroccans

Dutch appeals court convicts Geert Wilders of insulting Moroccans

A Dutch appeals court upheld Friday the conviction of far-right politician Geert Wilders for insulting Moroccans in comments he made at an election night gathering in 2014. However, the court overturned Wilders’ conviction for inciting discrimination.

The appeals court did not punish Wilders for his conviction, which he can appeal against to the Dutch Supreme Court.

Wilders’ comments “can contribute to polarisation within Dutch society, while in our democratic, pluralistic society respect for others, especially minority groups, is of great importance,” said Presiding Judge Jan Maarten Reinking.

The politician, whose career has been based largely on his anti-Islam rhetoric, was convicted in December 2016 of insulting and inciting discrimination against Moroccans in 2014. He did not recieve a punishment.

Wilders made no immediate comment in court Friday.

The Party for Freedom leader has always insisted he is innocent and branded his prosecution a politically-motivated attempt to muzzle him and an attack on freedom of speech.

The appeals court rejected his claims of political interference in the case and said that free speech also has limits.

Friday’s conviction was based on comments Wilders made on the night of Dutch municipal elections in 2014 at a meeting in a Hague cafe.

In what appeals judges said was a carefully prepared exchange, Wilders asked supporters whether they wanted more or fewer Moroccans in the Netherlands. This sparked a chant of “Fewer! Fewer! Fewer!” — to which he replied: “We’ll take care of it.”

The ruling on Friday comes around six months before national parliamentary elections in the Netherlands. According to a poll of polls, Wilders’ party is the largest opposition party.