1/23/2015
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However, LGBT rights campaingers were disappointed by what they viewed as relatively light punishments, as the maximum punishment for such crimes is up to a year in prison and a €45,000 fine. One defendant was fined €300 while the other two were forced to pay €500,TheLocal.Fr reported.
Alexandre Marcel, president of the Comité Idaho, told The Local: "It’s a small amount to pay for calling for the death of homosexuals."
LGBT rights groups in France regularly report homophobic hashtags, which Twitter then removes from trending topics to make them less visible.
But when "#lesgaysdoiventdisparaîtrecar " ("Gays must die because") appeared as trending on the website, it was not immediately removed – prompting the then government spokeswoman Najat Vallaud-Belkacem to condemn the tweets.
Twitter has been contacted by The Independent for a comment, but has not yet responded.
Yohann Roszewitch, president of SOS Homophobie, an LGBT association which also reports on homophobic tweets, told the website: "We’re positive that this will send out the message that the internet is not a place with no rules where you can do whatever you want."
Last year, SOS Homophobie revealed that the number of homophobic acts in France had increased by 78 percent in 2013.
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