Kovács vows action on Guardian article

History

The Hungarian government will take “the necessary steps” against UK daily newspaper The Guardian for an article that made “untrue statements” about Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s comments on the death penalty and illegal immigrants, government spokesperson Zoltán Kovács told MTI late yesterday.

The Guardian article, published yesterday, begins as follows: “Hungary’s nationalist rightwing leader, Viktor Orbán, has threatened to reintroduce the death penalty, outlawed in the European Union. The prime minister also reinforced his reputation as the EU’s main maverick with a powerful anti-immigration manifesto that equates migrants with terrorists, says immigrants are taking Hungarians’ jobs, recommends internment camps for illegal immigrants and states they should be forced to work.”

Kovács (pictured) said that the statements made by the paper “consciously misinterpret the words of the prime minister.” Kovács said that it is not the Hungarian politicians who want to keep the issue of the death penalty on the agenda but “Hungarian citizens and voters”. If citizens talk about the matter then the Hungarian politicians need to talk about it as well, he said. “Regardless, we abide by the international laws” Kovács added.

As for The Guardian, Kovács said that it is not the first time “in the paper’s history” that it has published “untrue and radical accusations towards the Hungarian government”, and so the government will take all the neccessary measures.

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