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microrobert
02-16-2015, 07:27 PM
Neo-Nazi number plate ban mulled

Austrian transport minister Alois Stöger of the Social Democrat Party announced Monday that he is planning to change the Motor Vehicle Act in order to restrict the use of banned symbols on vehicle number plates.

According to a report from the Austrian Press Agency (APA), the minister announced that certain combinations of letters and numbers would be compiled and added to a 'banned' list. The list currently restricts the use of 'ridiculous or offensive' letter combinations, but doesn't presently cover banned neo-Nazi symbols.

As examples, the minister cited the use of simple substitution codes, where letters are represented by numbers. For example, the initials of Adolph Hitler are symbolized by the number 18, while the Nazi greeting Heil Hitler would be 88. Similarly, the Klu Klux Klan would be 311, because K is the 11th letter which appears three times.

Additionally, codes such as NSDAP - which stands for the National Socialist German Workers' Party - and SS would also be banned.

The list of Nazi and racist symbols is currently maintained by the Mauthausen Commitee (MKÖ).

Number plate combinations that already exist before the new regulations go into force, expected sometime in summer, would not be affected.

http://www.thelocal.at/20150216/neo-nazi-number-plate-ban-mulled

Ctwentysevenj
02-23-2015, 11:34 AM
I suppose you cannot put this on the frontof your car while driving around Vienna
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Lm20CPErs00/UlcrSfLrcqI/AAAAAAAAT9A/nHjMXvxz1bQ/s1600/Adolf+Hitler+-+Ex+Libris+-+Hitler's+Library+-+Occult+History+Third+Reich+-+Peter+Crawford.jpg

microrobert
07-23-2015, 11:59 AM
Austria bans 'hidden' neo-Nazi codes on car number plates

Austria is cracking down on personalised number plates used by neo-Nazis, by banning lesser-known codes with hidden far-right symbolism.

Letter combinations such as HJ or NS - denoting Hitler Youth and National Socialism - have long been prohibited on personalised plates in Austria.

Now transport officials have published a list of more than 30 more cryptic codes that have been banned.

They include number combinations such as 88, which represents "Heil Hitler".

New legislation, which came into force on Thursday, also outlaws the use of IS or ISIS on personalised number plates in a bid to stop people showing their support for the Islamic State group.

'No place in society'

"It has been forbidden to have obvious Nazi number plates since personalised plates went on sale in 1989," a spokeswoman for Austria's transport ministry told the BBC.

"But then we learned that the far-right scene is moving away from the more obvious codes to more hidden ones.

"So we had to change the law. Civil servants deciding if someone can choose a certain number plate now know which codes are being used by the far-right scene."

Austria was joined to Nazi Germany from 1938-1945

Combinations no longer allowed include:

◾BH - Blood and Honour
◾420 - 20 April, Hitler's birthday
◾1919 - meaning SS, as S is the 19th letter in the alphabet
◾WAW - White Aryan War
◾FG - Fuehrer's Geburtstag (leader's birthday)
◾88 - Heil Hitler, due to where H comes in the alphabet

Only new number plates will be affected by the change in the law.

Abbreviations now outlawed include FG, which stands for "Fuehrer's Geburtstag", meaning "leader's birthday", and WP for "white power".

Number combinations have not previously been included, but now codes such as 18 - meaning 'Adolf Hitler' because of where A and H come in the alphabet - are also now prohibited.

The new list was compiled in co-operation with the Mauthausen Committee, an organisation representing former concentration camp prisoners. Officials say it is not exhaustive.

Austrian Transport Minister Alois Stoeger, who pushed for the law change, has said: "National Socialist ideology has no place in our society."

More than half a million Austrians have currently personalised licence plates, according to Austria's public broadcaster, ORF.

The move in Austria follows similar efforts in Germany to crack down on neo-Nazi symbols.

In Germany, the law says that number plates must not offend public morals. Each state has its own list of banned combinations, and some are stricter than others.

But attempts to introduce a federal solution, similar to that in Austria, have been unsuccessful so far.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-33634656

sql
07-23-2015, 12:04 PM
What is with Europeans and banning things? :confused: :picard1: