Appeal for 'dwarf-tossing'
thrown out
By Emma Jane Kirby
BBC correspondent in Geneva
A tiny stuntman who protested against a French ban on the
little-known sport of "dwarf-tossing" has lost
his case before a United Nations human rights committee.
Manuel Wackenheim used to earn his living being thrown
around bars and discothèques by customers.
He became unemployed in the mid-1990s, after France's highest
administrative court ruled that his job was contrary to
human dignity.
Mr Wackenheim appealed against the French ban, but when
this failed, he took his complaint before the UN's Human
Rights and Anti-Discriminational Committee, claiming that
his rights had been violated.
But the UN committee said it was satisfied that the ban
on dwarf-tossing should be upheld "in order to protect
public order and considerations of human dignity".
Imported pastime
Mr Wackenheim earned his living through the bizarre sport
of "dwarf-throwing" - a pastime imported from
the United States and Australia in the 1980s.
The sport consists of big men in clubs and discos competing
to see who can throw a small man the furthest.
The stuntman wears a crash helmet and padded clothing which
has handles on the back.
The Frenchman himself is 1.14 metres (three feet seven
inches) tall.
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