לפיכך מותר להתקין צלחת לווין בכל מקום ואסור למנוע התקנת צלחת לווין.
יתרה מזאת אם משהו ימנע מכם להתקין צלחת לווין זכותכם לתבוע אותו בבית משפט
על כך.
ועדי בתים ובעלי גג כולל גג פרטי אינם יכולים להתנגד להתקנה צלחת לוויין פרטית
בישראל אם צלחת לוויין של YES או כל צלחת אחרת מותקנת על הגג אז גם לכם מותר להתקין על הגג.
לפי סעיף 10 בחוק האירופי והאמנה לזכיות אדם צלחת לווין מופיעה כאחת מזכיות האדם
לאחר מתן פסק דין זה בצרפת ובשוודיה .
לא ניתן לערער על הקביעה הזאת בישראל בית המשפט העליון מחויב לפסוק לפי התביעה הזאת.
בעבר כבר ניתנה פסיקה בבית משפט בישראל המתיר התקנת צלחת לווין
ושועד הבית אינו יכול להתנגד לכך
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Having a satellite dish 'is a human right,' says European court
By IAN DRURY
Last updated at 11:24 AM on 8th August 2011
It is regarded as a luxury that allows people to watch top sport and blockbuster movies from the comfort of their armchairs.
But owning a satellite dish is actually a human right, according to unelected European judges.
In an extraordinary ruling, lawmakers in Strasbourg have warned that banning dishes on listed buildings, social housing and even private homes could breach the right to freedom of expression by preventing people from practice religion.
Disputes: Having a satellite dishes on the side of a property in order to recieve information is a 'human right', a European Court has ruled
The judgement is a huge blow to campaigners who have fought to stop the large metal dishes blighting the brickwork of historic buildings and rental properties.
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), Britain’s discrimination watchdog, has now published new guidance warning that landlords could be at risk of being sued if they try to stop their tenants putting up a satellite dish.
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Housing Minister Grant Shapps said that the ruling, under the Human Rights Act, threatened to drive ‘a horse and cart’ through planning laws.
The quango issued the guidance following a recent case at the European Court of Human Rights.
Ruling: The European Court of Human Rights, pictured, made the judgement after a Swedish couple were evicted for refusing to take down a dish
Two tenants in Sweden took their government to court after they were evicted by their landlord in a dispute over a dish.
The couple installed one of the dishes on their rented property but the landlord ordered them to take it down. They refused and were later thrown out of the property.
But European judges ruled that the Swedish government had failed in its obligation to protect the couple’s right to receive information. It found that satellite dishes come under Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
In its guidance, Britain’s equalities watchdog suggested that a disabled tenant who received transmissions of religious services held overseas would have their rights to freedom of religion breached if their landlord banned satellite dishes.
The European Commission’s Internal Market Commissioner Frits Bolkestein said: ‘The right to use a satellite dish [is] one of the many concrete benefits for European consumers of the free movement of goods and services within the internal market.
‘Satellite dishes are an increasingly popular tool for receiving multiple services via satellite: they facilitate mutual exchanges between our various cultures by overcoming national borders, and familiarise the general public with the new remote communications technologies. Their use must therefore be free from any unjustified obstacle.’
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