Thousands of LGBTQ+ Tenses of Rights Supporters attended the Budapest Pride March on Saturday, disregarding a police ban and threat to Hungary Prime Minister Victor Orban.
“We believe Arena 180,000 to 200,000 people are participating,” Pride Chairman Victoria Radwani told the AFP news agency. “It is difficult to guess because there are so many people in Budapest Pride.”
Prime Minister Orban has banned the rights of the LGBTQ+ community over the years, and his party MPs have passed a law in March, allowing a pride march to be banned, claiming that it was inspired by the need for safety of children.
However, Budapest’s Mayor Gargali Karkani declared a municipal program to the Pride Parade, arguing that the designation enhances the assembly law and renders to ban the police.
European support
The annual program is now a symbol of resistance to a general suppression of civil society in Hungary under the Nationalist Government of Orban, which is facing a growing challan from the Tisja Party of Center-rights Peter Magyar before the next year.
“This is too much, not only about homosexuality, … this is the last moment to stand for our rights,” the marchrs said.
More than 30 embassies for March have Voice -Support, which was due to the European Commissioner Hadja Lahbib and for about 70 members of the European Parliament to participate by the European Commissioner.
Ahead of the parade, European Commission Chairman Ursula von Der Leyen has called upon Hungary officials not to block March.
Leyen wrote in a statement, “Our Sangh is one of equality and non-discrimination.” He called thesis a “core value”, which “should be honored all the time in all members.”
According to a letter sent by Justice Minister Bens Tuzson to some foreign embassies in Budapest, conducting the discovery of the program, on charges of a misunderstanding, anyone attending March, accused of a misunderstanding.
The so -called Child Protection Act that allows the ban to implement the ban, allows the policy to hand over penalty and use facial identification techniques to identify.
Civil society under pressure in Hungary
In the last decade, the government of Orban has often been in the Loggerheads with the European Union on the growing repression of civil freedom and has been freed under the guise of protecting the “Christian” values. Hence Orban has used nationalism and color correct rhetoric to strengthen his grip on power since reconstructing his position as Prime Minister in 2010.
The ban on Pride March is seen by opponents as part of the Crackdown on Democratic Freedoms before next year’s elections, on which Orban’s government is expected to face a tough challenge from Magyar, whose party has been a pioneer in public opinion surveys.
Tisza Party, avoids taking a strong position on homosexual rights issues, yet called the government to protect anyone participating in March.
Its press office said, “Peter Magyar has asked the Hungarian officials and the police to protect the Hungarian people on this Saturday, and even on other days, even though it means that it means standing against the arbitrariness of power.” Magyar Himola has not planned the Statistand.
Edited by: Keran Burke and Darko Jenjeevic