February 11th, 2008

Extremists in coordinated attacks on Socialist MPs’ homes

A group calling itself the Hungarian Arrows National Liberation Army has claimed responsibility for throwing Molotov cocktails at the homes of five Socialist MPs around the country early Friday morning. None of the MPs were seriously injured.

The attacks were apparently meant to persuade the five to vote against the health insurance bill in Parliament today. The five are Zsuzsanna Dér in Dunaújváros, István Sándor in Göd, András Kálmán in Rácalmas, Imre Herbály in the village of Kunhegyes and Imre Czinege in Cegléd.

In an e-mail message sent to Hír TV, the group said “Let the early Friday morning flames remind all traitors of where the No button lies.” The same group claimed responsibility for a physical attack on Sándor Csintalan, who hosts a show on Hír TV, in December, calling him a “Jewish hireling.”

In addition, someone poured diesel fuel around the home of the Borsod Socialist county chapter leader, and put matchsticks beside it, said caucus leader Ildikó Lendvai. The attacks strengthened the resolve of the party to vote for the bill, she said.

National Police chief József Bencze and Justice and Law Enforcement Minister Albert Takács on Saturday offered a Ft 5 million reward to anyone who provides essential information about the perpetrators. The same sum was offered for information on Csintalan’s assailants.

An envelope containing brown powder was sent to Ninth District Free Democrat mayor Ferenc Gegesy at the weekend.

Socialist spokesman István Nyakó said it ought to be pronounced that all attacks on democratically elected politicians, regardless of party affiliation, should be condemned.

Fidesz MP János Lázár, chairman of the House national defence and law enforcement committee, said police have been unable to find the perpetrators of what the government calls terrorist acts, either because they are incompetent or because the highest government circles are behind the acts.

Topics
Share
Comments
The All Hungary Media Group is firmly committed to freedom of expression and therefore applies a mostly "hands off" approach to comment moderation. Comments left by readers represent their own views and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or beliefs of the staff, editors or owner of the All Hungary Media Group, who nonetheless reserve the right to remove comments that are off-topic or which moderators consider to constitute "hate speech." Also note that in order to prevent spam we generally close entries off to comments several days after publication.

2 Comments

  1. Viking says:

    “the highest government circles are behind the acts.” What proof does “Fidesz MP János Lázár, chairman of the House national defence and law enforcement committee” provide for this statement?
    Reminds me very much of Fidesz MP and VP Pokorni’s statement just after the storming of the MTV-building, that it was “provocateurs from the Government” who started the trobles in September 2006.
    No proof have ever been shown by Fidesz for this and it act just as a support for the violence.

  2. elayne says:

    As a Hungarian it greatly saddens me to see these nuts running around such a beautiful country. What does it take for some people to learn that these tactics will only cause more loses for the people and the country. They are fools and not needed. Hungary should ban such groups before we are sorry and have another Trianon and just disappear. Either that or some one else running the country again. The world will not tolerate such thinking if it gets out of hand.