Bangkok Post

Budapest summons Nordic envoys over decree row

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BUDAPEST: Hungary was set to summon the ambassador­s of five Nordic countries yesterday over their countries’ criticism of a controvers­ial law that empowers Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban to carry out measures by the decree against the novel coronaviru­s.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said on Facebook on Sunday that he would summon the diplomats as Hungary “wanted no pitiful hypocritic­al tutelage” and reiterated Budapest would go its own way.

The law, which authorises Mr Orban to bypass parliament indefinite­ly in measures to contain the virus and mitigate its after-effects, has provoked an internatio­nal wave of criticism, including from rights groups and the EU Commission.

The Council of Europe, the EU’s main human rights body, was among the first to warn Hungary about its democratic backslide and its issues over freedom of expression in a March 24 letter by Secretary-General Marija Pejcinovic Buric.

“An indefinite and uncontroll­ed state of emergency cannot guarantee that the basic principles of democracy will be observed and that the emergency measures restrictin­g fundamenta­l human rights are strictly proportion­ate to the threat which they are supposed to counter,” Ms Buric wrote then.

The foreign ministers of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden wrote to Ms Buric on May 6 that they “share the concerns expressed in that letter. Even in an emergency situation the rule of law must prevail”.

Mr Orban has been at odds with EU institutio­ns since taking power in 2010, going head to head over economic policies, corruption, immigratio­n and his expanding influence over all walks of life.

The premier has used that pretext to paint the EU as an adversary in massive campaigns, an electoral strategy that has paid handsome dividends, helping to cement his rule, but has left him ostracised among his European peers.

The European People’s Party suspended the membership of Mr Orban’s Fidesz from the mainstream conservati­ve group over such conflicts, but the premier continues to use the issue for political gain.

Mr Orban on March 26 told Ms Buric that the law did not give him unlimited powers and could be withdrawn by Parliament — where his Fidesz holds a two-thirds majority — at any time.

“If you cannot help us in the current crisis, please at the very least refrain from blocking our defence effort,” Mr Orban wrote to the secretary-general. The government-controlled press repeated that phrase for weeks.

 ??  ?? Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Peter Szijjarto, right, hands over medical donations to his Bosnian counterpar­t in Sarajevo in April.
Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Peter Szijjarto, right, hands over medical donations to his Bosnian counterpar­t in Sarajevo in April.

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