Back in June, the Franco-Japanese Sasakawa Foundation sued a French academic for libel. Karoline Postel-Vinay had started a petition urging a boycott of a conference sponsored by the foundation, "citing the wartime past of its founder, Ryoichi Sasakawa". The Foundation argued that Sasakawa was never formally convicted as a war criminal so anyone calling him that would be guilty of libel. The court was due to rule last week and I assumed the result might make the news but it seems to have slipped under the radar. I can only find French language sources but a verdict was announced. In short, the foundation lost and the academic was exonerated. It's a little more nuanced than that. Le Monde writes:
Dans son jugement, le tribunal rappelle qu'il ne lui "appartient nullement de trancher une controverse de nature historique". Toutefois, soulignent les magistrats de la 17e chambre civile du TGI de Paris, Mme Postel-Vinay "avait suffisamment d'éléments" pour tenir de tels propos. Mercredi, le tribunal a considéré que certains des propos poursuivis étaient bien diffamatoires. Toutefois, considérant que la chercheuse en relations internationales avait "légitimement usé de sa liberté d'expression", il lui a octroyé le bénéfice de la bonne foi.
"In its ruling, the court said that it was not looking to settle a historical controversy but the judges thought Ms. Postel-Vinay had sufficient evidence to make her statements. The court did hold that certain remarks could be considered defamatory but the researcher used her right to free speech legitimately and could be considered to have acted in good faith."
The Foundation has been ordered to pay her costs. Other French language reports here and here.