From the DW:
“EU threatens action against
Hungary's controversial LGBT+ bill”
(Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor
Orban (L) is welcomed by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in
the Berlaymont building at the EU headquarters in Brussels on April 23, 2021.)
The law recently passed by
Hungarian lawmakers violates "the fundamental values of the European
Union," the bloc's chief Ursula von der Leyen said. The European Union's
chief executive on Wednesday threatened legal action against Hungary for
legislation that restricts young people's access to information about LGBT+
issues. Last week, the Hungarian parliament approved the controversial bill,
which has to be signed by the president to take effect. "This Hungarian
bill is a shame,'' European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a
news conference. "This bill clearly
discriminates against people based on their sexual orientation. It goes against
the fundamental values of the European Union: human dignity, equality and
respect for human rights," von der Leyen said. "I will use all the
powers of the Commission to ensure that the rights of all EU citizens are
guaranteed. Whoever they are and wherever they live within the European
Union.''
What has Hungary said about
the bill? Hungary's right-wing Prime
Minister Viktor Orban said in an interview with German news agency dpa that the
bill was aimed at protecting children. On Tuesday, Hungary's Foreign Minister
Peter Szijjarto said the law would allow "parents to educate their kids
regarding sexual orientation until the age of 18." "This law
does not say anything regarding [the] sexual orientation of adults,'' he said.
Orban, speaking to dpa, argued that Hungary was in fact a safe country for
the LGBT+ community nowadays. "In
communist Hungary, homosexual people were persecuted. Today the state not only
guarantees the rights of homosexuals but actively protects them," Orban
said. On the other hand, critics
of the bill say it conflates pedophilia with non-heterosexuality, fearing that
its vague wording can be used to persecute members of the LGBT+ community.
What has been the reaction? The
issue surrounding the Hungarian law has courted particular attention in the
past day owing to the Euro 2020 football competition. Europe's football
governing body, UEFA, denied a request by Munich to light its stadium in LGBT+
rainbow colors for the Germany-Hungary Euro 2020 match on Wednesday. However,
several stadiums around Germany will be illuminated in rainbow colors in
protest of the Hungarian law and UEFA's decision. A joint statement initiated by Belgium and
signed by 14 EU member states, including Germany, France, Spain and Italy,
voiced "grave concern" at the law. "Stigmatizing LGBTIQ persons constitutes
a clear breach of their fundamental right to dignity, as provided for in the EU
Charter and international law," the statement read.
^ This bill is clearly just a way
for Hungary to officially discriminate against Homosexuals by claiming they are
“protecting the children.” That is exactly the same way Russia created it’s
anti-Homosexuality Law in 2013. I am glad that the EU is going to stand-up for
the Gays and Lesbians in Hungary (something they couldn’t do in Russia.) ^
https://www.dw.com/en/eu-threatens-action-against-hungarys-controversial-lgbt-bill/a-58013616
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