21 European states and Australia condemned Hungary's gay pride parade ban
More than two dozen European states and Australia in a joint statement expressed concern over the decision of the Hungarian authorities to ban the LGBT community from holding the annual Pride parade.
In a statement, the embassies of 21 states of Europe and Australia note that the legislation adopted in Hungary “leads to the restriction of the right to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression.”
The statement was signed by the embassies of Australia, Austria, Belgium, Great Britain, Denmark, Estonia, Iceland, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Germany, Norway, Poland, Slovenia, Spain, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Spain, Switzerland and Sweden.
Recall, on March 18, the Hungarian Parliament adopted a bill of Prime Minister Viktor Orban's party “Fidesz”, which bans the LGBTQ+ communities Pride parade and imposes fines on the organizers and participants of the event. This sparked mass protests in Budapest against restrictions on the right to assemble.
This is not the first move by Hungarian authorities to restrict LGBT rights.
In 2021, it banned “homosexual propaganda” among people under the age of 18 there, despite sharp criticism from human rights groups and the European Union.
The Venice Commission has concluded that a Hungarian law banning the teaching of homosexuality and transgender issues in schools violates international human rights standards.
Now the places of especially dense concentration of faggots of all stripes in the government are precisely defined.