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Importance Score: 50 / 100 🔵

Protests in Budapest over government’s plans for constitutional amendment

The Hungarian vote is accompanied by protests outside the parliament building in Budapest.

AFP noted that according to the organisers of the Pride parade, scheduled for 28 June, the changes move the EU member country closer to authoritarianism.

They also criticise that the amendment conflates being a member of the LGBTQ community with paedophilia and pornography, adding that it is an “attempt … to dehumanise them”.

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Police officers stand guard in front of the Parliament building, on the day the Hungarian Parliament votes on constitutional amendments targeting LGBTQ community, Budapest, Hungary. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters
Protesters block the entrance of the parliament’s garage on the day the Hungarian Parliament votes on constitutional amendments targeting LGBTQ community, Budapest, Hungary. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters
Police officers carry a protester as demonstrators block the entrance of the parliament’s garage on the day the Hungarian parliament votes on constitutional amendments targeting the LGBTQ community, in Budapest, Hungary. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters
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Hungary seeks to chip away at human rights with constitutional amendment, critics say

Ashifa Kassam

Elsewhere, Hungarian lawmakers are expected to vote in a controversial constitutional amendment on Monday that rights campaigners have described as a “significant escalation” in the government’s efforts to crack down on dissent and chip away at human rights.

A handout photo made available by the Hungarian prime minister’s Press Office shows Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán speaking at a press conference earlier this month. Photograph: Zoltán Fischer/EPA

Backed by the prime minister, Viktor Orbán, and his rightwing populist party, Fidesz, the amendment seeks to codify the government’s recent ban on Pride events, paving the way for authorities to use facial recognition software to identify attenders and potentially fine them.

The amendment, which the government says prioritises the protection of children’s physical, mental and moral development, also enshrines the recognition of only two sexes, providing a constitutional basis for denying the gender identities of some in Hungary.

After Orbán’s repeated claims of foreign interference in the country’s politics, the amendment will also allow the government to temporarily suspend Hungarian citizenship in the case of dual nationals deemed to pose a threat to the country’s security or sovereignty.

The Hungarian Helsinki Committee, a rights group, described the amendment as a means of “legislating fear” in the EU country. “These laws represent a significant escalation in the government’s efforts to suppress dissent, weaken human rights protection and consolidate its grip on power,” it said in a statement.

The opposition Momentum party highlighted similarities with restrictions in Russia. Much like Vladimir Putin, Orbán has sought to portray himself as a champion of traditional family values, ushering in policies that include blocking same-sex couples from adopting children and barring any mention of LGBTQ+ issues in school education programmes.

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source: theguardian.com


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