Chairman of the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) Herbert Kickl. EPA-EFE/MAX SLOVENCIK

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Austrian Socialists must pay right-wing party leader Kickl damages over ‘false accusations’

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Herbert Kickl, leader of Austria’s right-wing Freedom Party (FPÖ), has won a court case against the Socialist Party of Austria (SPÖ), which now has to pay him €1,500 damages and €6,900 in procedural costs.

The SPÖ had stated in a newsletter that Kickl had “close contacts” with a well known neo-Nazi.

In addition, it was spread that the then interior minister had ordered a raid at the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (then BVT) to confiscate a list in the right-wing extremism department that was supposed to prove closeness between the two.

On January 29, the Vienna Commercial Court ordered the SPÖ to dismiss these accusations with a counter-statement.

“There can be no doubt – especially taking into account the plaintiff’s ministerial office at the time and his current function as federal party chairman of the Freedom Party of Austria – that the incriminated statements are likely to impair or diminish the reputation or value of the plaintiff in society,” the court said in a judgment, seen by the national Austrian news agency APA.

The defendant’s statements constituted “an untrue defamatory insult to my reputation”, it added.

On January 30, the SPÖ published a public retraction, which it also shared on social media.

In that, it also added a link inviting readers to sign up to become a member of the party.