BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Hungary's president has signed a law proposed by Prime Minister Viktor Orban's ruling party that will ...
Hungary has criminalised organising or participating in Pride parades, and granted authorities facial recognition powers to ...
BUDAPEST - Hungary’s president has signed a law proposed by Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s ruling party that will ban LGBTQ+ communities from holding their annual Pride march, defying criticism by ...
Protests erupted in Hungary’s capital, Budapest, after the Eastern European nation’s parliament passed a law banning Pride ...
The law bans the Pride Parade on the grounds that it can be harmful to children. It also stipulates that police can use ...
The amendment was tabled on Monday and adopted on Tuesday. Opposition politicians, the organisers and NGOs have said this was ...
Hungarian authorities stated that the new law, which amends the law on assemblies, aims to protect the interests of children ...
This year’s Budapest Pride march will go ahead as planned "and will be the biggest one yet", Mayor Gergely Karácsony said on Facebook.
Thousands protested the ban outside Hungary’s parliament, blocking traffic and defying police orders to disperse.
Hungary has passed a law banning Pride marches held by the LGBTQ+ community, sparking outrage in and out of the country.
The new law is part of a crackdown on Hungary’s LGBTQ+ community by the nationalist-populist party of Prime Minister Viktor ...