Council of Europe urges Hungary to suspend laws on NGOs, universities

Council of Europe urges Hungary to suspend laws on NGOs, universities
By Euronews with REUTERS
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The Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly has called on Hungary to suspend a debate in the country’s parliament of bills which tighten rules on non-governmental organisations and foreign…

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The Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly has called on Hungary to suspend a debate in the country’s parliament of bills which tighten rules on non-governmental organisations and foreign universities.

The two bills, drafted by Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s right-wing government, have drawn strong protests at home and abroad.

The European Union opened a case against Hungary on Wednesday over the law on foreign universities, which targets a university in Budapest founded by the liberal U.S. financier George Soros.

Orban has also accused NGOs funded by Soros and operating in Hungary of promoting illegal migration, with what he said were paid political activists serving foreign interests.

The bill debated in the Hungarian parliament would require non-governmental organisations with foreign donations of at least 7.2 million forints to register with authorities and declare themselves as foreign-funded.

“The Assembly agrees that NGOs must be transparent about their sources of funds, but cannot accept the allegation that civil society organisations serve foreign interest groups, rather than the public interest,” the Assembly of the Council of Europe said after adopting a resolution.

The 47-member Council of Europe is separate from the European Union.

It said it was concerned about the lack of internal public consultation on the draft, the gravity of the sanctions on NGOs if they do not comply with the new rules, and the fact that the rules would not apply to all NGOs.

Orban’s critics say the move against CEU and NGOs is part of his broader push to stifle dissenting voices and put independent institutions – including the judiciary, media and NGOs – under closer government control.

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