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Béla Incze, a board member of Légió Hungária, told Vasárnap.hu about the demolition of the BLM statue in Ferencváros. “When I first learned that this statue was being erected, I immediately decided that if I was the first to get there, I would tear it down and then walk towards the police,” the man told the portal. He added that the day of the sculpture they arrived at the same time with the politicians of Our Country, with whom they talked about what they were preparing for and what the schedule should be. Incze said that there is no official relationship between the two organizations, there was no consultation before the action, writes the Hungarian Nation.
Following the demolition of the statue, a member of the Hungarian Legion’s board of directors approached the patrol and indicated that they did not want to resist or flee. He called a police procedural fair, although he said of the production room that “where I was, I evoked African conditions with terribly ugly conditions, but I do not wish anything more for criminals.
According to Incze, Krisztina Baranyi, Ferencváros mayor, and the district leadership “said in several places that the statue was erected knowing that it would be damaged, so a quasi-communication trap was set against those who would react to any reaction.” If they had simply ignored the provocation of the LGBTQ lobby, they would have simply been stronger. If the door opens a space for such movements, they first cover their feet, push their knees, and finally kick the door.
If they set such a communication trap, they need not fear what the reaction will be, but they must act in a way that is worthy of a man, a man of the right, Incze said.
He added that in his opinion, this action does not worsen the perception of Hungary in the West, as Hungary has so far been known as “reluctant to see the BLM or LGBTQ movement.” My confrontation expresses the opinion of the average person, Béla Incze emphasized.
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