The service provider wanted to dismantle the gas meters of the Dankó Street institutions in Budapest.

The gas supplier’s employees tried to dismantle the gas meters on Thursday at the Hungarian Evangelical Brotherhood (MET) institutions in Budapest, Dankó Street, led by Gábor Iványi, writes Magyar Hang.

The economic director, István Ónodi, told the newspaper that experts showed up in the morning to dismantle the two gas meters. This was avoided, but then they wanted to cut off the street gas, but they were not allowed to do so either. Currently, volunteers are monitoring the site.

The two institutions on Dankó street have a gas debt of HUF 30 million, but the state owes them much more. Now a community fundraiser has started to help them.

At the end of August, it turned out that half of the educational institutions of the Hungarian Evangelical Brotherhood, led by Gábor Iványi, will receive as much support this year as before, and next year the funds received under the public education agreement will be completely zero.


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“This is not Christianity,” but “paganism and greedy selfishness,” sums up the pastor who once baptized Viktor Orbán’s children. He does not yet know how the financial gap is being filled, which is due to the fact that the government has taken 95 million guilders from the schools of his church, the Hungarian Evangelical Brotherhood, which welcomes young people in need. Iványi says that the poor are by no means left alone, and continues to confess that “if you have the opportunity to speak, you can only tell the truth.

Government withdraws additional support for Gábor Iványi schools


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According to Emmi, what has been spent on the institutions of the Hungarian Evangelical Brotherhood in the last decade and a half will not pay off.