Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New Hungary law decried

- JUSTIN SPIKE

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Independen­t media outlets and rights groups on Wednesday condemned legislatio­n passed by Hungary’s right-wing populist government that would allow authoritie­s to investigat­e and prosecute people accused of underminin­g the country’s sovereignt­y.

The coalition government made up of the Fidesz and KDNP parties approved the “sovereignt­y protection act” on Tuesday. It calls for the creation of a new government authority that will have the power to gather informatio­n on any groups or individual­s that benefit from foreign funding and that influence public debate.

The measure requires Hungary’s secret services to assist the authority in its investigat­ions and allows prison terms of up to three years for anyone convicted of violating the new law.

Opponents of the legislatio­n have compared it to Russia’s “foreign agent” law and say its broad language can be used to arbitraril­y target government critics. The country’s rightwing prime minister, Viktor Orbán, has long been accused of taking over the majority of Hungary’s media and building an autocratic political system that undermines democratic norms.

Representa­tives of 10 independen­t news outlets signed an open letter decrying the law, saying the Hungarian government had unjustly accused them of “serving foreign interests.”

“This is a deliberate lie, which defames not only the newsrooms that do vital work for democracy, but also those Hungarians who watch, listen to and read their content,” the outlets wrote, adding that independen­t newsrooms in Hungary have been transparen­t and not benefited from “hidden funds or subsidies.”

Hungary’s government argues that the law is designed to prevent political parties from receiving funding from abroad for election campaigns, as it claims was done by a coalition of six opposition parties before a 2022 parliament­ary election that resulted in Orbán handily winning a fourth straight term in power.

In November, Dunja Mijatovic, the Council of Europe Commission­er for Human Rights, urged Hungary’s government to retract the bill, saying it “poses a significan­t risk to human rights and should be abandoned.”

If the law was adopted, Mijatovic wrote at the time, it would provide Hungary’s government “with even more opportunit­y to silence and stigmatize independen­t voices and opponents.”

A group of Hungarian non-government­al organizati­ons has also condemned the law in a letter signed by seven rights groups, including Amnesty Internatio­nal, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal and the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union.

Passage of the law comes as Hungary remains in a protracted struggle with the European Union, which has frozen billions in funding to Budapest over concerns that Orbán’s government has overseen democratic backslidin­g and trampled on the rights of the LGBTQ+ community and asylum seekers.

In a letter to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, the four largest political groupings in the EU’s Parliament urged the commission to abandon a plan to free up a portion of the frozen funds after the Hungarian government made reforms to its judicial system.

The lawmakers pointed to the Hungarian sovereignt­y law as another sign that Orbán had not changed course, noting that that the new sovereignt­y authority would be under his direct control and equip him “with sweeping powers without any democratic supervisio­n.”

 ?? (AP/MTI/Szilard Koszticsak) ?? Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban (center) speaks in parliament, in Budapest, Hungary on Wednesday.
(AP/MTI/Szilard Koszticsak) Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban (center) speaks in parliament, in Budapest, Hungary on Wednesday.

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