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News > World

Hungary Slams UN for Criticizing Racist Anti-Migrant Policies

  • Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban (C) and his Bulgarian counterpart Boiko Borisov (centre R) inspect the barbed wire fence constructed on the Bulgarian-Turkish border, near Lesovo, Bulgaria September 14, 2016.

    Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban (C) and his Bulgarian counterpart Boiko Borisov (centre R) inspect the barbed wire fence constructed on the Bulgarian-Turkish border, near Lesovo, Bulgaria September 14, 2016. | Photo: Reuters

Published 19 September 2018
Opinion

Hungary's address came after the new UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet and a group of UN rights experts last week harshly criticised Hungary's policies.

Hungary's foreign minister accused UN officials Wednesday of "spreading lies" with their criticism of Budapest's anti-migration policies, insisting his country would "never be a country of migrants."

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"It is obvious that the UN officials spreading these lies about Hungary are biased pro-migration officials," Peter Szijjarto told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

Hungary, he said, will "never be a country of migrants... We will never allow one single illegal migrant to enter the territory of our country." "Hungary will remain a country of the Hungarians, which is happy and which is proud of its more than 1,000-year-long history and Christian culture and traditions," he said.

Szijjarto, whose appearance at the UN's top rights body was announced less than 24 hours before his speech, did not cite any UN officials by name. But his address came after the new UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet and a group of UN rights experts last week harshly criticised Hungary's policies.

He slammed UN officials for stating "nonsense about Hungary" and for issuing documents that "were not more than collections of lies."

Without providing specifics, he said UN officials had issued documents that "basically question the maturity of the Hungarian people (and) suggest that it would be better to place Hungary under a guardianship." "These documents suggest that they want to protect Hungarian people from themselves," he said.

In the written version of her maiden speech to the council on September 10, Bachelet pointed to "shocking reports" that "food has been withheld from migrants held in transit zones on the Hungarian-Serbian border."

She also took issue with measures adopted by the Hungarian government in June enabling "authorities to arrest, criminally charge and immediately remove from Hungary's border area any lawyer, adviser, volunteer or legally resident family member suspected of helping a person to make an asylum claim, obtain a residence permit, or take other perfectly legal actions."

In a separate statement, seven independent UN special rapporteurs, including for migrants' rights, freedom of expression and the rights activists, also slammed Hungary's anti-immigrant policies last week, and voiced alarm at "smear campaigns" against civil society.

Those experts called on "European institutions to continue addressing the deteriorating human rights situation in Hungary and keep on taking decisions reflecting the core values of the European Union: democracy, the rule of law and the protection of human rights."

Last week, the European Parliament initiated a procedure that could ultimately see Hungary stripped of EU voting rights over controversial reforms that Brussels says undermine democracy.

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