Meeting of minds as Netanyahu visits Orbn – EURACTIV

Posted By on July 18, 2017

Hungary welcomes Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu today (18 July) on a landmark visit that Prime Minister Viktor Orbn hopes will bolster him in his battle with George Soros and deflect charges of stoking anti-Semitism.

It brings together two right-wingers enamoured of US President Donald Trump and with a disdain for the left-leaning liberal global order bankrolled, as they see it, by the likes of Soros, the US financier and philanthropist.

Netanyahu, fresh from a contentious visit to France, will on Wednesday meet premiers of the Visegrad Group Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic plus Hungary that has been increasingly at odds with the rest of the EU.

Leaders from the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia and Poland (the Visegrd Four) rejected yesterday (28 March) what they called Brussels use of blackmail and diktat over planned resettlements of migrants across the EU.

All these states are very pro-Israel, Raphael Vago, an expert on eastern Europe at Tel Aviv university, told AFP. They vote in our favour at the European Union and the United Nations.

Netanyahus trip to Hungary, the first by an Israeli prime minister since the end of communism in 1989, comes with tempers flaring over Orbns campaign vilifying the Hungarian-born billionaire Soros.

Posters attacking him for his alleged support of mass immigration some daubed with Stinking Jew graffiti have further upset Hungarys over 100,000-strong Jewish community, one of Europes largest.

They have often accused Orbn, in power since 2010, of turning a blind eye to anti-Semitism or even encouraging it with nationalist rhetoric that analysts say is aimed at staving off a rise in for the far-right, a charge the 54-year-old denies.

Whitewashing

Recently Orbn also praised Miklos Horthy, Hungarys wartime leader and Hitler ally until 1944, as an exceptional statesman for rebuilding Hungary after World War I.

Critics have long suspected Orbn of trying to rehabilitate Horthy, who oversaw the sending of over a half million Jews to the Nazi death camps, by tacitly encouraging new memorials of Horthy and other interwar figures.

In 2014, Hungarys biggest Jewish organisation Mazsihisz boycotted state commemorations of the 70th anniversary of the 1944 deportations over concerns the government was whitewashing the states complicity.

But Orbn is at pains to stress his zero tolerance of anti-Semitism, his supporters pointing to a new law outlawing Holocaust denial and state funding for Jewish-themed films like Oscar-winner Son of Saul.

No government has done more to fight anti-Semitism in Hungary, his spokesman said in a blog post on Thursday.

A million migrants

Soros, who hid from the Nazis in Budapest as a boy, said that the posters, plastered nationwide, used anti-Semitic imagery.

His spokesman said they were reminiscent of Europes darkest hours. The head of Mazsihisz called the campaign poisonous.

Orbn insisted they were not about the 86-year-olds Jewishness but the national security risk posed by his wish to settle a million migrants in the European Union.

French MEP Jean-Luc Schaffhauser has blamed billionaire George Soros for having financed the humanitarian infrastructures that helped open Europes doors to uncontrolled flows of migrants, and for making money from the EUs destabilisation.

Orbns government is also making life difficult for the prestigious Central European University in Budapest, created by Soros, and for civil organisations he funds prompting EU legal action.

Hungary saw the biggest anti-government protest in three years on Sunday (9 April), as tens of thousands demonstrated against new higher education legislation seen as targeting the respected Central European University.

Netanyahu, 67, whose relations with the EU are strained too, is also scornful about Soros because of his support for both Israeli and Palestinian rights groups critical of Israels government and the occupation.

Some in Israel called for Netanyahu to cancel his Hungary trip because of the posters which will be down by the time he arrives with Israels ambassador saying it evokes sad memories (and) sows hatred and fear.

But hours later, a foreign ministry statement backtracked reportedly at Netanyahus behest.

While Israel deplores anti-Semitism, Soros continuously undermines Israels democratically elected governments by funding organisations that defame the Jewish state and seek to deny it the right to defend itself, it said.

Connecting Soros to the migration issue is the (Hungarian) governments aim, but it is a problem for Orbn if the campaign is seen as anti-Semitic, political analyst Csaba Toth told AFP.

So the Netanyahu visit helps him as it bolsters his claims that the Soros campaign is not.

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Meeting of minds as Netanyahu visits Orbn - EURACTIV

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