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Facebook user fined US$890 for posting photo of police car in disabled parking spot

GENESIMM0NS

Alfrescian
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Facebook user fined US$890 for posting photo of police car in disabled parking spot

PUBLISHED : Monday, 17 August, 2015, 8:45am
UPDATED : Monday, 17 August, 2015, 8:45am

The Guardian in Barcelona

park2.jpg


The photo that resulted in a fine for a Spanish Facebook user. Photo: Facebook

A Spanish woman has been fined 800 euros (HK$6,900) under the country’s controversial new gagging law for posting a photograph of a police car parked illegally in a disabled bay.

The unnamed woman, a resident of Petrer in Alicante, south-east Spain, posted the photo on her Facebook page with the comment: “Park where you bloody well please and you won’t even be fined.”

The police tracked her down within 48 hours and fined her.

The Citizens Security Law, popularly known as the gagging law and which came into force on 1 July, prohibits “the unauthorised use of images of police officers that might jeopardise their or their family’s safety or that of protected facilities or police operations”.

Amnesty International condemned the law, saying that photographing police is vital in cases when excessive force has been used. Fines under this section of the law range from 600 euros to 30,000 euros.

Fernando Portillo, a spokesman for the local police, said the officers had parked in the disabled bay because they had been called to deal with an incident of vandalism in a nearby park. A rapid response is essential if they are to catch the offenders “in flagranti” he told local media, adding that in an emergency the police park where they can.

Asked how the photo had put the police at risk, he said the officers felt the woman had impugned their honour by posting the picture and referred the incident to the town hall authorities.

“We would have preferred a different solution but they have the legal right to impose the fine,” Portillo said.

The gagging law also prohibits demonstrations in the vicinity of parliament or the senate, trying to prevent an eviction or actions of passive resistance such as sit-down protests in the street. Offenders face fines of up to 600,000 euros.


 
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