France
must return almost 4.6 million euros it seized from Jehovah's Witnesses
for taxes on donations, the European Court of Human Rights ruled
Thursday
The
ruling comes a year after Europe's top rights court said France had
interfered with the religious freedom of the Christian sect when it
imposed a tax on donations from followers.
France must
reimburse 4.59 million euros ($5.7 million) for the taxes "unduly paid,"
the court said in a statement, as well as 55,000 euros ($68,000) in
costs and expenses.
The
Strasbourg-based court, however, rejected a Jehovah's Witness demand for
250,000 euros in damages -- one euro for each of the sect's followers
in France -- as well as another request for France to scrap altogether
its efforts to collect taxes from the group.
The Association of
Jehovah's Witnesses claimed the French government was trying to repress
their activities by imposing in 1998 a tax assessment that amounted in
total to 45 million euros ($56 million), covering the period from 1993
to 1996, though France seized only a fraction of that amount.
Philippe Goni, a
Jehovah's Witnesses lawyer, welcomed the ruling he said recognised the
sect had been subject to "genuine discrimination" by French authorities.
"It's a fresh
victory for Jehovah's Witnesses, who have been denigrated and
stigmatised since 1995," he said, referring to a parliamentary report
into French sects, which followers said aimed to marginalise the group.
http://www.expatica.com/fr/news/french-news/france-must-return-46-mn-euros-to-jehovah-s-witnesses_236715.html
http://www.expatica.com/fr/news/french-news/france-must-return-46-mn-euros-to-jehovah-s-witnesses_236715.html
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