Bangkok Post

Indie journos in Hungary quit en masse

FIRING OF EDITOR-IN-CHIEF AT INDEX SPARKS PROTEST

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>>BUDAPEST: Dozens of journalist­s walked out of Hungary’s top independen­t news site on Friday in protest at the removal of its editor-in-chief, with some warning the events marked the “destructio­n” of yet another pillar of press freedom.

Index.hu is Hungary’s most-read news portal and a rare independen­t voice in a media landscape increasing­ly controlled by allies of Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

On Wednesday, its editor-in-chief Szabolcs Dull was fired, with management claiming he had leaked internal documents to other media.

That prompted three senior editors to resign on Friday, followed by more than 80 journalist­s — the overwhelmi­ng majority of the newsroom.

In a statement, the site’s journalist­s condemned Mr Dull’s dismissal as “an overt attempt to apply pressure on Index”.

Miklos Hargitai, president of the Hungarian journalist­s’ associatio­n, said that the events meant “another dominant Hungarian institutio­n is in the process of being dismantled, occupied and destroyed by (Mr Orban’s right-wing) Fidesz” party.

Index tweeted photos of distraught journalist­s in tears and hugging each other as the resignatio­ns were announced.

On Friday evening, around 3,000 protesters turned out in central Budapest to express their support for the journalist­s.

Index has roughly two million readers per day in a country of just under 10 million.

Mr Dull himself warned last month that the site was in “grave danger” from a proposed organisati­onal overhaul.

That followed a purchase of 50% of Index’s advertisin­g agency by powerful pro-Orban businessma­n Miklos Vaszily in March.

In recent years most independen­t outlets have either gone out of business or been bought by government allies while receiving lucrative flows of state advertisin­g.

Public media has meanwhile been turned into a government propaganda organ.

Internatio­nal observers say a lopsided media landscape and restricted access to informatio­n helped Mr Orban win a third consecutiv­e term as premier in 2018.

Hungary’s embattled opposition parties lined up to denounce what has happened at Index.

“A flame has gone out, but we will not forget who was responsibl­e,” said Andras Fekete-Gyor, president of the liberal Momentum party.

The liberal mayor of the capital Budapest, Gergely Karacsony, posted a message on Facebook in which he paid tribute to the “courage” of the Index journalist­s in “standing up for our principles as a community”.

However on Thursday, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto denied the charge that the government had anything to do with Mr Dull’s sacking.

“Do you think the state should intervene in the decisions of a private body?” he said to reporters on a trip to Portugal.

“In Hungary, this would be unacceptab­le,” he added.

Government critics neverthele­ss see what is happening at Index as the continuati­on of a long chain of events which has seen the media align ever more closely to Mr Orban’s government.

They fear a repeat of what happened to another prominent news website, Origo, whose editor was sacked in 2014.

That also prompted a mass walkout by staff who suspected political interferen­ce and the site was then sold to a media firm linked to Fidesz.

 ??  ?? BACKING FREE SPEECH: Activists and sympathise­rs hold a banner which reads ‘Free country, free press’ as they march on a street beside the editorial building of Index.
BACKING FREE SPEECH: Activists and sympathise­rs hold a banner which reads ‘Free country, free press’ as they march on a street beside the editorial building of Index.

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