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Hungarian extreme right set up paramilitary Guard
By Markus Salzmann
24 September 2007
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The end of August witnessed the foundation in Hungary of an
extreme-right-wing paramilitary Hungarian Guard. The
foundation of this force, which is supported by prominent political
and social forces in the country, took place in a public ceremony.
The establishment of such a neo-fascist paramilitary force must
be seen as a serious warning to the Hungarian and the European
working class.
Around 1,000 sympathisers and supporters gathered in front
of the Budapest Castle, directly before the offices of the Hungarian
president, Laszlo Solyom, to swear in the first 56 members of
the guard (a number chosen to commemorate the 1956 uprising against
Stalinism).
Among those taking part were not only representatives of various
extreme right-wing and fascist groupings, but also the prominent
conservative opposition party, Fidesz, as well as Catholic, Evangelical
and Calvinist priests waving flags. Lajos Für, Defence Secretary
of the first conservative government to take power under Prime
Minister Jozsef Antall, following the collapse of the Hungarian
Stalinist state in 1990, swore in the new recruits
and presented them with their memorial documents.
Participants raised a red-white-red flag of the type used by
Hungarian fascists during the Second World War, when the Horthy
dictatorship was allied with Hitler Germany, and those sworn in
to the Guard were dressed in the black uniforms favoured by the
wartime Fascists. The day of the swearing-in ceremony had also
been carefully chosen. On August 25, 1,100 years ago, the Hungarian
army defeated Bavarian troops at the battle of Bratislava.
The Guard explained its aims in the run-up to its foundation.
It wants to defend a physically, intellectually and spiritually
defenceless Hungary. Its members are explicitly requested
to learn how to handle weaponsan unmistakable threat to
use force. Its aims include the elimination of the
current so-called social-liberal government headed
by Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany.
The head of the guard is the 29-year-old Gabor Vona, chairman
of the ultra-right-wing party Jobbik (Movement for a Better Hungary).
Jobbik emerged in 1999 from a student group, led by David Kovacs,
a member for many years of another extreme-right organisation
called the Life and Truth Party (MIEP). Former history student
Vona had formerly worked closely with ex-Prime Minister and opposition
leader Victor Orban, who has sought to win support for Fidesz
from extreme-right circles through the creation of so-called citizen
defence districts.
Fidesz has been playing a thoroughly dubious role for some
time. Outwardly, the party presents itself as liberal and democratic
while at the same time cooperating closely with neo-fascist forces.
When in power between 1998 and 2002, it was supported by the MIEP,
and many Fidesz politicians still maintain contact to the MIEP,
Jobbik and other ultra-right groups. The proposal to develop a
Fatherland Guard within the army also came from the
ranks of Fidesz.
Encouraged by the support from sections of the ruling elite,
Hungarys extreme right has taken an increasingly aggressive
course. Following violent clashes in front of the government buildings
one year ago, approximately 10,000 persons demonstrated against
the Gyurcsany government. The demonstration had been called by
a total of 30 groups, most of which belonged to the spectrum of
extreme-right-wing politics. Additional demonstrations by right-wingers
are planned for September.
The protests against the government in September 2006 arose
in response to the so-called speech of lies by Prime
Minister Gyurcsany. The prime minister had given the disputed
speech shortly after the parliamentary election of April 23, 2006,
in order to rally his misnamed Socialist Party (MSZP) around an
austerity programme that was adopted two weeks later. In his speech,
Gyurcsany admitted that he had deliberately deceived the electorate
and postponed economic measures in order to win the election.
Following the failure of any other organisation to give vent
to public anger over Gyurcsanys speech and his anti-social
policies, the extreme right was able to dominate the protest demonstration
at that time.
A European problem
A paramilitary group resembling the Hungarian Guard had already
been established in Bulgaria some months ago. Bojan Rassate, former
head of the racist Bulgarian Peoples Union, founded a National
Guard with the aim of defending helpless Bulgarians
against gypsy gangs.
The guard organised a torchlight march for the notorious Bulgarian
fascist Hristo Lukov and several parades in schoolyards and other
public places. The Bulgarian guard is also responsible for a number
of violent attacks on the countrys Roma minority. In mid-August,
several dozen skinheads with links to the guard launched an attack
in the Roma quarter of Krasna Poljana in the Bulgarian capital
of Sofia. Some days before, around 30 right-wing extremists had
attacked three young Roma, severely injuring one of them. The
Roma minority then responded with spontaneous protests against
the right-wingers, which also ended in violent clashes.
The reaction by political circles and media resembled that
in Hungary. The governing socialists led by Sergej Stanischev,
which head a grand coalition with the right-conservative party
of the Tsars son Simeon Saxecoburgotski, did not even condemn
the attacks. Instead, they blamed the Roma. The deputy interior
minister, Kamen Penkov, told the press that there were no skinheads
in those suburbs of Sofia where the clashes took place. Therefore,
those behind the acts of violence must be Roma gangs.
The extreme right is also represented in most other eastern
European parliaments and in some countries is even involved in
government. In Slovakia, for example, the Smer party led by Robert
Fico, which calls itself social democratic, has formed a coalition
with the neo-fascist Slovak National Party, and, until recently,
two ultra-right-wing parties were coalition partners of the Kaczynski
brothers in Poland.
The presence of these forces at a national level is also reflected
in the European parliament. The entry of Romania and Bulgaria
into the European Union meant that deputies from the extreme-right
Bulgarian Ataka and the Great Romania Party also entered the parliament
in Strasbourg and made it possible for the right-wing extremists
to form their own parliamentary group. Europes extreme right
has assembled under the name Identity, Tradition and Sovereignty
and includes such notorious neo-fascists as Jean-Marie Le Pen
of the French National Front, Andreas Mölzer of the Austrian
Liberals and Alessandra Mussolini, the granddaughter of the Italian
dictator.
Possessing parliamentary group status, the deputies receive
additional funding from the parliamentary budget and have the
right to vote in the Conference of Presidents, which
lays down the parliaments agenda. In addition, they have
increased powers to submit proposed legal amendments. The group
is also entitled to interpreters, assistants and other personnel.
A consequence of capitalist restoration
The Hungarian head of the government, Gyurcsany, his MSZP and
its coalition partner the free market SZDSZ have described the
newly created Guard as a dishonour for Hungary.
However, no one should be misled regarding their own political
responsibility for the increasing influence of such extreme-right
tendencies. The fact that fascist elements can spread their political
programme today, largely undisturbed by official parties and institutions,
and exercise their terror against minorities is primarily a result
of the right-wing policies of the alleged socialists.
The cynicism of such former Stalinists who organised the restoration
of capitalism and filled their own pockets in the process through
smashing up social and welfare gainswhile retaining the
name socialisthas played into the hands of extreme-right
demagogues. Growing poverty and a lack of perspective, fuelled
by deliberate nationalist agitation on the part of the ruling
elite, have created fertile soil for the growth of right-wing
tendencies.
Gyurcsanys Socialists are exemplary in this respect.
Seventeen years after the introduction of the free market, Hungary
remains more remote than ever from any sort of prosperity and
democracy. A narrow layer has been able to accumulate obscene
amounts of wealth, while increasing numbers of the population
confront ever more precarious living conditions.
Gyurcsany began his political career as a youth functionary
in the Stalinist state party, and amassed a fortune in the course
of the wild privatisations carried out in the 1990s.
Today, he is on the list of the 100 richest Hungarians, and as
head of the government is now feverishly implementing reforms
in the interests of international finance. Many of Gyurcsanys
cronies occupy senior party and government posts.
Figures such as Gyurcsany are to be found in many eastern European
countries carrying out virtually identical policies. For example,
both Stanischev in Bulgaria and Fico in Slovakia also began their
careers in the Stalinist parties only to become glowing advocates
of the free market economic system.
The Hungarian Socialists implemented reforms in the health
and pension systems that led to precipitous rises in health insurance
and the price of medicine. Pension levels are set to decline under
the existing paltry level, while energy prices have risen by 30
percent during the past two years. Value-added tax on goods and
services has been raised by 5 percent at a time when wages are
either stagnating or actually falling.
The political opposition, on the other hand, largely consists
of conservative, anticommunist forces, frequently led by former
dissidents. Orbans party Fidesz first emerged at the end
of the 1980s and came to prominence at the time of the collapse
of Stalinism, attacking the Stalinist system from the right. At
that time, Fidesz ranted against communist totalitarianism
and demanded freedom and democracy. Today, it openly endorses
totalitarian forms of government. Orban made this clear in the
run-up to elections held in the spring of last year. The
Republic is merely a façade draped over the nation,
he declared and indicated he could just as well contemplate other
systems of governmentfor example, a dictatorship.
Such considerations are combined with the active stoking up
of hatred against minorities and immigrants with Fidesz taking
up demandssuch as the demand for the return of Transylvania
to Hungarywhich have until now been the traditional preserve
of ultra-right forces.
See Also:
Hungary: The controversy
over the heritage of the 1956 Revolution
[28 October 2006]
Hungary 1956: A revolution
against StalinismPart 2
[26 October 2006]
Hungary 1956: A revolution
against StalinismPart 1
[25 October 2006]
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