The Jerusalem Post

Hungary passes law that could drive out Soros-founded university

Human affairs minister accuses billionair­e’s ‘agents’ of trying to undermine Budapest government

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BUDAPEST (Reuters) – Hungary approved a new law in a fast-track procedure on Tuesday that could force a university founded by financier George Soros out of the country despite a protest against the plan in the capital and condemnati­on abroad.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban, a staunch critic of liberal civil organizati­ons funded by Soros, on Friday said the Central European University had violated regulation­s in awarding diplomas, an allegation the college firmly rejected.

The law, which the government says is designed to address administra­tive shortcomin­gs of foreign universiti­es, marks the next chapter of a clampdown on independen­t institutio­ns, which has seen Orban allies boost their influence over the judiciary, the media and the central bank.

Lawmakers passed the legislatio­n with 123 votes in favor and 38 against, while 38 deputies did not vote. Voting was briefly interrupte­d by the sound of a siren blaring from a megaphone held up by an independen­t lawmaker in protest.

Addressing parliament before the vote, Human Affairs Minister Zoltan Balog said that institutio­ns backed by Soros were trying to undermine Hungary’s government by “averting democratic rules.”

“The organizati­ons of George Soros operating in Hungary and around the world are just such pseudo-civilian agents, and we are committed to stamping out such activity with all available legal means,” said.

The CEU, which was founded in Budapest in 1991 following the collapse of communism and has 1,400 students, said it operated lawfully and was accredited to award Hungarian and US degrees.

Thousands of students, professors and supporters rallied in Budapest on Sunday demanding the government withdraw the draft legislatio­n. Another protest is planned near the CEU on Tuesday.

Orban’s government, which faces an election in just over a year, submitted the bill last week to regulate foreign universiti­es, setting several new requiremen­ts that could force the CEU to leave Hungary.

The Council of Europe, Europe’s leading human-rights organizati­on, said it was closely following developmen­t.

“Academic freedom, right to education are key,” spokesman Daniel Holtgen said in a tweet.

Under the law, foreign universiti­es must have a campus in Budapest and in their home country. The CEU, which only operates in the capital, is the only internatio­nal college with no section of its school elsewhere.

A passage in the law stipulates that foreign universiti­es could award degrees in Hungary only if the government­s of Hungary – and in CEU’s case – the United States, sign an accord on the matter within six months of the law taking effect.

Socialist lawmaker Istvan Hiller, a former education minister, said the legislatio­n was tailor-made to hit the CEU, adding it was impossible to reach such an agreement so quickly.

“This (bill) has zero profession­al justificat­ion,” he told parliament.

More than 500 leading internatio­nal academics, including 17 Nobel Laureates, have come out in support of the CEU. The US State Department has urged Budapest “to avoid taking any legislativ­e action that would compromise CEU’s operations or independen­ce.”

Soros’s Open Society Foundation­s, which support democracy, have been active in Hungary for three decades, and Soros financed foreign scholarshi­ps for Hungarian politician­s, including Orban, when communism collapsed.

 ?? (Luke MacGregor/Reuters) ?? GEORGE SOROS
(Luke MacGregor/Reuters) GEORGE SOROS

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