Orban is mentioned in a Finnish newspaper with Stalin, protests by Zoltán Kovács



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The largest Finnish newspaper wrote an article on the behavior of dictators, writes Hvg.hu. On the basis of the review, Helsingin Sanomat cites examples such as the President of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, Stalin, the former Iraqi dictator, Saddam hussein and Viktor Orban. The article mentions Hungary as an authoritarian or hybrid regime, and also covers how public money came to Orbán, for example through construction work. According to the brief, the prime minister has been doing everything he can since 2010 to ensure that a similar electoral defeat in 2002 does not happen again: he has rewritten the laws and is tightening the media and independent institutions.

For the article on Twitter reacted Zoltán Kovács The Secretary of State for International Communications, who described the tone of the writing as scandalous, especially when Helsingin Sanomat “began to acquire the Finnish media market, with which it would achieve a semi-monopoly”. Kovács also recalled that it was Orbán who, in 1989, Imre nagy and at the burial of his martyrs, he demanded the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Hungary.

According to Kovács, the dictatorship of a country where “ethnic profiling is common, public portrayal of the swastika is not prohibited, there is no constitutional court is particularly strange.” By the way, this is not the first time that the Orbán government has been embroiled in a similar debate with the Finns, and last summer the Prime Minister attacked the Finnish constitutional system with considerable lapses:

What happens to Orban with the Finns?

The prime minister, who is trying to transform anti-liberalism into Christian freedom, does not want to understand the consensual functioning of Finnish institutions and is slipping.

The Hungarian ambassador in Helsinki also responded to Helsingin Sanomat’s article. György Urkuti In a public Facebook post in Finnish, he put it this way, according to an article on Hvg.hu:

Featured Image: MTI / Prime Minister’s Press Office / Benko Vivien Cher



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