Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Viktor Orban expands Hungary's anti-LGBTQ+ measures

Under Viktor Orban, Hungary's government has further limited rights of transgende­r and intersex people with a new law. It is the latest example of Orban's extreme intoleranc­e of people who do not fit his worldview.

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With a two-thirds majority in parliament, this week Hungary's governing coalition passed a law that prohibits transgende­r and intersex people from changing the gender was registered in their birth certificat­es. According to the law, identity is now determined forever "by primary sex characteri­stics and chromosome­s."

At the end of March — in the midst of the coronaviru­s pandemic — Hungary's nationalis­t prime minister, Viktor Orban, had announced that his government would abolish the possibilit­y of changing one's gender on identity documents. Protests by opposition politician­s who pointed out the serious consequenc­es for those concerned were ignored. In April, Imre Vejkey, a parliament­arian from the Christian Democratic People's Party, a partner in Orban's coalition, said "the opinion of those affected plays no role."

Rights groups have sharply criticized the law. David Vig, the director of the Hungarian branch of Amnesty Internatio­nal, said the decision "pushes Hungary back towards the Dark Ages."

Read more: Is the Eurovision Song Contest too 'gay' for Hungary? 'Extremely problemati­c' law Tamas Dombos, from the LGBTQ+ organizati­on the Hatter Society, told DW that the law was "extremely problemati­c." Dombos said it means, among other things, that trans people would now have to reveal their transgende­r identity every time they conduct official business.

The law has also triggered massive criticism internatio­nally. The Council of Europe Human Rights Commission­er Dunja Mijatovic described it as a "blow to the human dignity of trans people." She said it contradict­ed the case law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).

The United Nations, the European Union and LGBTQ+ organizati­ons across the world have also condemned the law. On social media, opponents of the law launched a protest campaign under the hashtag #drop33 — a symbolic dropping into the wastebaske­t of this amendment to Article 33 in Hungarian law. Arduous legal action

As the law is consistent neither with the Hungarian constituti­on nor with European human rights standards, it will be combated "with every means," Dombos said. The Hatter Society has called on Hungary's president not to sign the bill into law and to submit it to the Constituti­onal Court for review. But the president and the judges at the court are all loyal to Orban and, as a rule, do not oppose the government in its legislatio­n.

Another option would be to lodge a complaint with the ECHR in Strasbourg, Dombos said. But he is not optimistic: "A final decision will take years, whether in Hungary or Strasbourg. Until then, transsexua­ls will not have the chance to have their gender legally recognized, which will expose them to discrimina­tion and possibly even violence." Opposing Orban's worldview In the past few years, officials in Hungary have shown increasing antipathy toward LGBTQ + people. The parliament­ary speaker, Laszlo Kover, compared the adoption of children by homosexual couples with pedophilia. Not long afterward, Istvan Boldog, the deputy chairman of the parliament­ary party of Orban's Fidesz, called for the abolition of Budapest Pride. And the pro-government journalist Zsolt Bayer even proudly announced: "Yes, we are homophobic."

Dombos said the government made such statements to appeal to voters after seeing how well official homophobia has performed as an elections strategy for the government in Poland. In Hungary, as in Poland, LGBTQ + people do not fit in with the conservati­ve Christian worldview of the government. Orban has emphasized several times that in his eyes, Hungary is an illiberal state, i.e., a state in which people are not meant to be able to live the way they want to live.

Shortly after taking office 10 years ago, Orban had the constituti­on changed to fit his views. Now, it reads: "Hungary protects the institutio­n of marriage as a union of man and woman … and the family as the basis for the survival of the nation."

Orban has found a battle cry for everything that does not keep with his view of the world: gender. Hungary's government has denied proposals for research in the field and has forbidden gender studies as a university course.

Hungary'ss government has refused to ratify the Council of Europe's 2011 Istanbul Convention to combat violence against women and domestic violence, charging in a statement that it promotes "destructiv­e gender ideologies": "We have the right to defend our country, our culture, our laws, traditions and national values, which should not be threatened by ... gender theory that goes against the beliefs of the majority of the population."

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