Viktor Orbán sparks outrage with attack on ‘race
mixing’ in Europe
Hungary’s far-right prime minister says countries
where races mingle are ‘no longer nations’
Shaun
Walker in Budapest and Flora Garamvolgyi
Sun 24 Jul
2022 16.46 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/24/viktor-orban-against-race-mixing-europe-hungary
Hungary’s
far-right prime minister, Viktor Orbán, has lashed out against the “mixing” of
European and non-European races, in a speech that immediately drew outrage from
opposition parties and European politicians.
“We
[Hungarians] are not a mixed race … and we do not want to become a mixed race,”
said Orbán on Saturday. He added that countries where European and
non-Europeans mingle were “no longer nations”.
Orbán has
been making similar claims for years, but these comments were couched in stark
far-right terms.
Katalin
Cseh, an MEP from the opposition Momentum party, said she was appalled by the
prime minister’s speech. “His statements recall a time I think we would all
like to forget. They really show the true colours of the regime,” she said.
On Twitter,
Cseh addressed mixed-race people in Hungary: “Your skin colour may be
different, you may come from Europe or beyond, but you are one of us, and we
are proud of you. Diversity strengthens the nation, it doesn’t weaken it.”
The
Romanian MEP Alin Mituța also responded angrily to Orbán’s comments. “Speaking
about race or ethnic ‘purity’, especially in such a mixed region such as
central and eastern Europe, is purely delusional and dangerous. And so is Mr
Orban,” he wrote on Twitter.
Orbán made
the remarks during a showpiece annual speech in Băile Tuşnad, Romania, where he
has previously floated major policy ideas or ideological directions. It was
there, in 2014, that he first said he wanted to build an “illiberal democracy”
in Hungary.
This year,
Orbán gave an apocalyptic speech predicting the decline of the west and prophesying
“a decade of peril, uncertainty, and war”. He also sharply criticised western
military support for Ukraine, positioning himself as Moscow’s foremost ally
inside the European Union.
“The more
modern weapons Nato gives the Ukrainians, the more the Russians will push the
frontline forward … What we are doing is prolonging the war,” said Orbán during
a speech on Saturday.
Hungary is
a member of Nato, but the far-right Orbán has long had warm relations with
Putin, and spent five hours in Moscow talking to the Russian leader in
February, shortly before the Russian invasion. The speech came two days after
his foreign minister made a surprise trip to Moscow for talks, and puts him far
outside the European consensus on the war.
Orbán said the
job of the west should not be to hope for a Ukrainian victory, but to mediate a
peace deal. “We shouldn’t be on Russia’s side, or Ukraine’s side, but between
the two,” he said, adding that the policy of imposing sanctions on Russia had
not worked.
Oleg
Nikolenko, spokesperson for Ukraine’s foreign ministry, described Orbán’s
claims as “Russian propaganda”.
Orbán won a
fourth consecutive term in office in an election earlier this year, with his
government accused of stifling media freedom and backsliding on democratic
norms since his Fidesz party won power in 2010. Since the 2015 refugee crisis,
Orbán’s government has used far-right anti-migration rhetoric as its main
talking point.
On
Saturday, he made frequent nods to the “great replacement” conspiracy theory,
which claims there is a plot to dilute the white populations of the US and
European countries through immigration. He said it was “an ideological trick of
the internationalist left to say the European population is already mixed
race”.
He named
demographics, migration and gender as the main battlefields of the future, on
the same day that thousands of people rallied in Budapest for the city’s annual
Pride march.
The
European Commission is currently suing Hungary over a recent anti-LGBTQ+ law, a
copy of Russia’s “gay propaganda” law. It bans gay people from featuring in
school educational materials or TV shows aimed at minors.
Orbán’s
position on Ukraine has lost him support among some of his previous ideological
allies, notably Poland’s ruling Law and Justice party, which has criticised his
equivocal stance on the war.
“He’s
further away from the European mainstream than ever before,” said Péter Krekó,
of the Political Capital thinktank in Budapest. “I think he really believes
that migration pressures will mean the united west is soon over and every
government will become far right … It’s also clear he wants Russia to win this
war.”
Orbán will
be hoping for Italian elections in September to return a rightwing coalition,
and is also rooting for the return of Donald Trump in 2024. Next month, he is
due to travel to Dallas, Texas, where he will address CPAC, a large gathering
of American conservatives. Earlier this year, CPAC hosted a special session of
the conference in Budapest.
At home,
Orbán’s battle with European institutions seems likely to intensify further.
The EU has frozen several billion euros of recovery funds earmarked for Hungary
over corruption and rule-of-law concerns. Orbán’s harsh speech may be a sign
that the Hungarian government has given up on receiving the funds.
“He knows
exactly what reaction there would be to this speech, and I think he’s preparing
for a lack of compromise,” said Krekó. “He wants to fight the symbolic fight
instead of talking about the austerity measures they will need to introduce.”
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