Tuesday 12 August 2014

Hungarian despotism: Europe must act | openDemocracy

Phoenix : My Hungarian activist friends have been warning us for the lst few years about the extremes of their Leader and government. A while ago they made it illegal to be homeless and have increasingly brought in more Draconian laws.
Hungarian despotism: Europe must act | openDemocracy: "Hungarian despotism: Europe must act LORENZO MARSILI 6 August 2014 Hungarian PM Viktor Orban has openly vowed to turn the country into an ‘illiberal state’. Europe cannot let this happen. Hungarian PM Viktor Orban. Flickr/EPP. Some rights reserved. “Hungary’s Mussolini Vows to Make the EU Member an Illiberal State”, titles Newsweek. Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban has finally come in the open. At a recent rally of party supporters he has admitted that he is out to turn the country into an illiberal state. He pointed out that liberal western democracies cannot remain globally competitive, and that China, Russia, and Turkey should be taken as the example to follow. These worrying statements are, unfortunately, backed up by facts. They follow years of increasingly restrictive laws in Hungary, which have endangered the independence of the judiciary, the media, and civil society, and entrenched the power of the ruling party, Fidesz.  In April 2011 a constitutional reform silenced the constitutional court, allowing the government to pass any legislation it sees fit. In the same year a draconian media reform placed public and private media under state tutelage, eventually leading to widespread manipulation in public broadcasting, direct censorship and closure of opposition media, and attempts to bankrupt international TV channel RLT for its criticism of the regime. As a result fear has returned to Hungarian society. Relatives and friends of opposition figures became unemployable, a number of NGOs receiving foreign aid were blacklisted, and international donors such as the Norwegian Civil Fund threatened with suspension of their operating license"

'via Blog this'

No comments:

Post a Comment