Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hungary’s pressure leads Soros groups to pack up

- MARC SANTORA

George Soros’ Open Society Foundation­s said Tuesday that it has become impossible to work in Hungary — where the prime minister has blamed Soros for the country’s problems — and that the foundation­s would move their operations to Berlin.

The foundation­s, which promote democracy, free expression and civil rights, have come under growing political and legal pressure from Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who has stifled dissent and declared last week that “the era of liberal democracy is over.”

The foundation­s have been a frequent target of the Hungarian government, and Orban has painted Soros, a prominent Democrat and billionair­e, as a shadowy figure seeking to undermine the country’s sovereignt­y.

“The government of Hungary has denigrated and misreprese­nted our work and repressed civil society for the sake of political gain, using tactics unpreceden­ted in the history of the European Union,” Patrick Gaspard, president of the foundation­s, said Tuesday.

The decision to close the groups’ offices in the country of Soros’ birth — though they will continue to operate in many other countries — is the culminatio­n of years of strug-

gle to work in an increasing­ly hostile environmen­t. Soros, 87, a Jew who survived the Nazi occupation of Budapest during World War II, later made a fortune in the financial markets, and he created the foundation­s and donated billions of dollars to them.

Orban campaigned on a nationalis­t, anti-immigrant platform and vowed during the most recent campaign to seek revenge against those he deemed enemies of the state. He has proposed what is commonly referred to as a “Stop Soros” law, aimed at penalizing nongovernm­ental agencies that assist asylum seekers and refugees.

The legislatio­n, as it was written before the election, would force aid agencies working with migrants to apply for and receive national security clearance from the Interior Ministry. Additional­ly, groups receiving foreign funding — which include almost all of the major nongovernm­ental organizati­ons in the country — would have to pay a 25 percent tax on those contributi­ons, a burden that many said would make it impossible to keep working in Hungary.

On Monday, Antal Rogan, the minister for Orban’s Cabinet office, said the government would propose an even “tighter” bill, but he provided no details. The legislatio­n is likely to

come up for a vote within the next month.

Orban’s party, Fidesz, along with a smaller coalition partner, holds two-thirds of the seats in Parliament and is therefore poised to pass whatever legislatio­n it sees fit — including changes to the constituti­on.

Leaders of the Open Society Foundation­s said that even without the approval of the bill, being based in the country had become untenable.

“It has become impossible to protect the security of our operations and our staff in Hungary from arbitrary government interferen­ce,” Gaspard said.

But the groups’ leaders vowed to continue to promote civil society in Hungary.

Central European University in Budapest, another institutio­n that was founded and funded by Soros, remains in a state of limbo. Under current law, it cannot accept new students after January 2019; if it cannot reach a compromise with the government, it may also be forced to leave the country.

Soros has spent hundreds of millions of dollars in Hungary to promote political freedom, beginning when it was under one-party communist rule. The foundation­s have worked in the country since 1984.

Orban has held on to power in large part by focusing on a single issue: the migration crisis that reached its peak in 2015. He has framed the issue as a battle for the survival of the nation, where migrants, many of them Muslims, will subvert the country’s Christian traditions.

It hardly seemed to matter during the campaign that few migrants were seeking to transit through Hungary. Orban successful­ly used the issue to accuse officials in Brussels and other Western leaders of seeking to undermine Hungary’s sovereignt­y.

No figure featured more prominentl­y in the campaign than Soros.

His image appeared on tens of thousands of posters plastered around the country, often edited to make it appear that he and leading opposition candidates were holding fence-cutting equipment, ready to throw open the nation’s borders.

In a statement, the foundation­s said the government had spent “more than 100 million euros” on a propaganda campaign against them, including “invoking anti-Semitic imagery from World War II.”

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