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EU lawmakers vote to stop Hungary’s Orban

Action was based on report that voiced concerns about human rights in the country

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The European Parliament yesterday launched an action that could unleash unpreceden­ted political sanctions against Viktor Orban’s populist Hungarian government for posing a “systemic threat” to the EU’s founding values.

The vote amounts to a stunning political blow for Prime Minister Orban, who had told the parliament on Tuesday that a scathing report leading to the vote was an insult to Hungary’s honour and people. Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto wasted little time in slamming the vote as “nothing less than the petty revenge of pro-immigratio­n politician­s”.

With elections for a new parliament in May 2019, the ■ vote reflects growing pushback among traditiona­l parties in Europe against the rise of populists, who oppose migration and are accused of underminin­g the rule of law.

Adopted by 448 votes for to 197 against and with 48 abstention­s, the motion marked the first time the parliament has itself initiated steps under Article Seven of the European Union’s treaty. An earlier action against Poland was initiated by the EU executive.

Dutch Greens Sargentini, who the vote, smiled MEP Judith spearheade­d broadly and breathed a sigh of relief before embracing her supporters in parliament in the French city of Strasbourg.

“It is a positive sign of this parliament taking responsibi­lity and wanting action,” Sargentini told a press conference afterward.

‘Nuclear option’

She had urged colleagues not to let Hungary off the hook, declaring that Orban’s rule “violates the values on which this union was built.”

The vote was based on a report that voiced concerns about judicial independen­ce, corruption, freedom of expression, academic freedom, religious freedom, and the rights of minorities and refugees under eight years of Orban rule.

The vote takes the first steps under Article 7 of the EU Treaty, known by some in Brussels as the “nuclear option”, which could ultimately strip Hungary of its EU voting rights.

 ?? AFP ?? Member of European Parliament Judith Sargentini (centre) reacts after the vote on the situation in Hungary at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, yesterday.
AFP Member of European Parliament Judith Sargentini (centre) reacts after the vote on the situation in Hungary at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, yesterday.

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