The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Orban’s opponents cry foul over corruption claims

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BUDAPEST: Football stadiums and street lamps may seem unlikely obstacles for Hungary’s strongman Viktor Orban, who looks set to win a third consecutiv­e term as prime minister in April 8 elections.

However, allegation­s of fraud in the funding of such public projects have dogged his campaign.

Some voters have clearly turned against the government over the issue with posters bearing the government’s slogan: ‘For us, Hungary comes first’ being defaced to read ‘For us, money comes first’.

Government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs dismisses the claims, telling AFP: “Hungary has no major problems with corruption, we see that it is a political effort by the opposition trying to make it a major issue.”

The NGO Transparen­cy Internatio­nal disagrees. In its latest world corruption perception­s index, based on surveys by experts, Hungary languished at the bottom of the EU countries surveyed, with only Bulgaria judged more corrupt.

Compared more broadly, it has fallen behind Georgia and Montenegro to 66th place out of 180, its lowest ever ranking.

“Several examples from the past few years illustrate that those in power regard public funds in Hungary as their own,” the organisati­on says in its report, dismissed by Kovacs as politicall­y motivated.

Sport, in particular football, is one area being highlighte­d as exemplifyi­ng the increasing overlap of political and business elites.

Orban was himself once an amateur player for the team in his hometown of Felcsut, which since 2014 boasts a lavish 3,500-seat stadium close to Orban’s second home, even though the town has a population of just 1,700.

Critics mocked the stadium as a waste of money but it is not the only case of its kind. Since 2010 around 30 stadium building or renovation projects have been approved including one in the town of Kisvarda, which has a population of 16,000 and an unexceptio­nal football team but whose MP is the National Developmen­t Minister Miklos Sesztak.

Also on the list was Mezokovesd, a club with a less than stellar track record but which since 2016 has played in a brand new 4,500-seat stadium and whose president Andras Tallai happens to be in the government.

Not all such projects are paid for directly with public money but some take advantage of controvers­ial tax breaks introduced in 2011 for businesses that sponsor team sports. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows Orban delivering a speech in front of the building of the Hungarian Parliament in Budapest, during the official commemorat­ion of the 170th anniversar­y of the 1848-1849 Hungarian revolution. — AFP photo
File photo shows Orban delivering a speech in front of the building of the Hungarian Parliament in Budapest, during the official commemorat­ion of the 170th anniversar­y of the 1848-1849 Hungarian revolution. — AFP photo

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