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Chomsky questions sincerity of Western free speech claims

American political commentator Noam Chomsky

American scholar Noam Chomsky has questioned the sincerity of the West's claims about free speech following the outrage over the recent terrorist attacks in France.

In an article published on the CNN website on Monday, Chomsky criticized the West’s propaganda campaign about free speech after several journalists lost their lives in an attack on the French controversial magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris.

He cited several examples of killings of journalists all over the world which have received little or no attention as opposed to the Paris incident.

Chomsky mentioned the example of the NATO missile attack on the Serbian state television headquarters in 1999, which claimed the lives of 16 journalists.

However, the leading American intellectual said, the attack was never condemned or denounced and was even hailed by the Western media and statesmen as “an enormously important and … positive development” since it sought “to undermine the regime of President Slobodan Milosevic of Yugoslavia” and its alleged propaganda mouthpiece.

He also referred to Israel’s "vicious" assault on Gaza in the summer of 2014 which left many journalists dead, most of them in well-marked press cars, saying the Israeli regime’s atrocities against journalist have often gone unnoticed in the Western media.

Chomsky also lashed out at France’s alleged vow to defend freedom of expression following the Paris attacks, saying the French government is itself engaged in the systematic violation of free speech.

According to Chomsky, the Gayssot Law which makes it legally punishable to question “Historical Truth”, the expulsion of Roma community, the terrible living conditions of the African refugees and the unrelenting support for the Israeli regime all show the hypocrisy of the French government and the West in its defense of free speech.

He concluded that the West’s “living memory” is “constructed to include Their crimes against us while scrupulously excluding Our crimes against them -- the latter not crimes but noble defense of the highest values, sometimes inadvertently flawed.”

On January 7, gunmen attacked the Paris office of Charlie Hebdo, killing 12 people and wounding 11 others.

The incident was followed by a series of sieges and shootings across Paris, resulting in the killing of more people.

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