Der ungarische Edward Snowden

Keine Korruption, kein Steuerbetrug: Das haben Demonstranten im Zentrum von Budapest gefordert. Behörden setzen normalerweise alles daran, um Steuersünder zu erwischen. Anders in Ungarn: dort ist die Steuerbehörde anscheinend gar nicht so scharf darauf, den Betrug zu stoppen. Das brachte vor Kurzem der Ex-Steuerfahnder András Horváth ans Licht:

“In Ungarn muss der, der recherchiert und Korruption öffentlich machen will, Angst haben”, so Horváth, “nicht aber Menschen, die korrupt sind oder Steuern hinterziehen.”

Dem ungarischen Finanzamt, seinem ehemaligen Arbeitgeber, wirft Horváth vor, die Untersuchung des Falls zu verhindern. Die größten systematischen Steuersünder in Ungarn seien Großsteuerzahler und Handelsketten, so Horváth. Seit Jahren sei es im ungarischen Finanzamt üblich, großen Unternehmen Steuernachlässe zu gewährleisten. In den Betrug könnten auch internationale Firmen verwickelt sein, sagte er in einem Interview.

more: Euronews(video)

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EU rights agency decries ‘mainstreaming’ of extremism in Hungary, Greece

Greece’s Golden Dawn and Hungary’s Jobbik have both been termed neo-Nazi parties by the World Jewish Congress.

The European Union’s Fundamental Rights Agency issued a series of recommendations last week aimed at stemming the “mainstreaming of elements of extremist ideology in political and public discourse” throughout the continent, particularly in Greece and Hungary.

The group specifically voiced concern over the “substantial parliamentary representation of parties that use paramilitary tactics or are closely associated with paramilitary groups and use extremist rhetoric to target irregular migrants in Greece, and the Roma and Jews in Hungary.”

The human rights watchdog cited several “barriers” to countering the rise in xenophobia, including, in the case of Greece, problematic record-keeping in the case of hate crimes and “no evidence” of a systematic effort to deal with racism. In Hungary, a strict interpretation of what constitutes incitement to hatred has set a high legal bar for prosecution, which has hindered efforts to curb extremism.

Record-keeping in Hungary is also problematic, the agency alleged. However, the FRA continued, both countries have made significant efforts to rectify these shortcomings.

“All public officials, representatives of human rights bodies and civil society organizations with whom FRA met expressed a strong interest and willingness to engage in multi–agency partnerships and outlined some concrete obstacles and barriers that should be resolved,” the group said in regard to Greece. Moreover, recent legal and police efforts aimed at shutting down the ultra-nationalist Golden Dawn party elicited praise for Athens from the continental group, including Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras’s promise to “deracinate” the party.

Such partnerships, the FRA believes, are key in combating racism and xenophobia.

more: theJerusalemPost

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Antigovernment Activist Beaten in Ukraine

MOSCOW — A crusading antigovernment journalist and activist in Ukraine, who became famous last year after documenting the opulence of the heavily guarded residential compound of President Viktor F. Yanukovich, was savagely beaten early Wednesday morning.

The assault on the activist, Tetyana Chornovol, 34, just outside the capital of Kiev, was the latest attack on government opponents who have been participating in sustained protests that have shaken the country.

On Tuesday evening, Dmitri Pylypets, an organizer of antigovernment protests in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, was beaten and stabbed four times while walking on the street near his apartment, local media reported. Just hours before she was ambushed, Ms. Chornovol published a blog item about a “country manor” being constructed for Ukraine’s embattled interior minister, Vitaly Zakharchenko, in the village of Pidhirtsi, near Kiev.

The assaults have occurred as protesters continue to occupy Independence Square in Kiev, where they first gathered last month in anger at Mr. Yanukovich’s decision to back away from sweeping political and free trade agreements with the European Union.

There were also ominous signs that the Ukrainian government was turning inward. The Ukrainian Security Service confirmed this week that it has blocked an unspecified number of foreigners, including several Americans, from entering the country, on suspicion that they were colluding with protest leaders and trying to destabilize Ukraine.

more: theNewYorkTimes

 

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„Hungary persecutes those who fight against corruption”

Billions of euros-worth of tax is lost in Hungary each year because of VAT fraud. The tax authority suggests the issue is innate to the European tax system, and cannot be stopped.

In November, a former analyst at Hungary’s National Tax and Customs Administration (NAV) stated that the tax office is not so keen on stopping VAT fraud at all. András Horváth claims his ex-employers obstruct inspections into large taxpayers (for example food retail chains) who, he says, are the main beneficiaries of VAT fraud.

The tax authority denied his allegations and launched a prosecution against him for slander. The government and the ruling party Fidesz is skeptical about the whistleblower’s claims. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán called him to bring forward proof of his allegations – although publishing the sensitive data would in fact be a crime. The whistleblower has already offered the results of his investigation to several influential members of the ruling party– without any consequences – before turning to the public.

Horváth has launched legal action against the tax authority for abuse of office. Now the whistleblower has also been targeted by the police; his home was raided and documents he had been preparing were seized in an investigation against an unknown suspect for misuse of personal data and abuse of office. Euronews asked him about his findings and these criminal proceedings.

Euronews: You claim that the Hungarian tax authorities cannot stop VAT fraud due to system malfunctions.

Horváth András: Not exactly. There are systems malfunctions, and on top of that the tax authority positively discriminates a group of clearly defined large taxpayers. It means they are rarely inspected and almost never inspected thoroughly, even though they are obviously in connection with companies involved in VAT fraud. Yes, there is a system malfunction I pointed out, and also specific cases of corruption.

EN: You also hint at deliberate activity behind NAV’s inability to deal with the VAT fraud cases. Most European tax authorities and the European Union as a whole seem to be unable to cope with the issue, so it is quite believable that NAV is simply not up to the task.

HA: My work proves this is not true. You can stand up against VAT fraud, but you can only do it if you do not chase the missing traders (proxy companies that disappear after committing the actual fraud) but you inspect the whole chain, starting from the large companies (mostly retail chains) that profit from the fraud in the end. Leaders of the Hungarian tax authority often say a European Court Judgement makes it impossible to catch those who profit from the fraud, because you have to prove that they knew, or should have known about the fraud committed several links before them in the chain. It is possible, but you have to inspect the largest taxpayers. Inspect their own databases, ask them all the questions you ask from others.

EN: And the one specific case of corruption?

HA: I uncovered how tax officers were set aside to stop the inspection of a grain trade company, one of the greatest suppliers of multinationals in Hungary. The inspection could have resulted in more than 1bn HUF (=3,3 million Euro) missing VAT being collected. Finally the tax inspector was ordered to close the case without any result.

EN: Before turning to the public, you wrote letters to leading politicians of the governing party. What was their reaction?

HA: There were inspections launched against one or two companies. But I got no response, the politicians never contacted me, they did nothing about the system malfunctions, and there were no investigations in the tax office. I thought that this problem cannot be solved without assistance from the government. I didn’t want to quit, I wanted to do my work at the tax authority. Later I came to know that other colleagues have already tried to warn the goverment, and were left without an answer – and protection.

more: Euronews

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Andras Schiff: Why I won’t perform in Hungary

Andras Schiff

One of the world’s greatest pianists, Andras Schiff, played his 60th birthday concert on Saturday – a hugely demanding programme of the Goldberg Variations by Bach and Beethoven’s Diabelli Variations. Earlier he told the BBC’s Tim Franks why he gave the performance in London – and not in his homeland, Hungary.

Andras Schiff takes me aback even before our interview begins: he shakes my hand, firmly.

About 18 months ago, on the eve of the 2012 Tour de France, I was warned by a press officer not even to proffer my hand to Bradley Wiggins, before an interview at his Majorca training camp. Team Sky simply could not risk me bruising the hands that would grip the handlebars that would steer Britain to its first ever Tour victory.

At the time, I could not work out whether Wiggins’ entourage was being utterly precious or utterly reasonable. But I had subconsciously carried the memory of that meeting to my interview with one of the world’s most highly regarded pianists.

Schiff has walked to BBC headquarters by himself, from his home in central London – a small, unobtrusive figure in a hat and long black coat. As he gazes around the controlled frenzy of the office where radio news programmes are made, and down the glass shaft into the main newsroom below, he exudes an innocent interest, almost delight.

Schiff has been described as the greatest musician Hungary has produced since the composers Bela Bartok and Zoltan Kodaly, in the first half of the 20th Century. But between the artist and his homeland there has been a rupture.

“Unfortunately, things in Hungary are not very good, to put it mildly,” Schiff says. “I’m a great opponent of the political situation there now.”

more: BBC NEWS

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Reporters Without Borders: 2013 – “Great People” EN

Journalists killed, bloggers imprisoned, censorship…, the overall level of freedom of information violations continues to be very high and the situation is still worrying in 2013 as proved by the annual round-up published on December 13th, 2013 by Reporters Without Borders.

Reporters Without Borders and its agency BETC denounce this alarming observation with their new campaign : Great People. By staging the propaganda by the enemies of press freedom, they remind with irony that without independent journalists, you would have to content yourself with this kind of “information”.

Made in collaboration with Rita Films and Green United Music, the campaign will be broadcasted on the major French TV channels and on the Internet from December 21st.

source: Reporters Without Borders

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From shelters to prisons? How homelessness became illegal in Hungary

On 14 November, a group of citizens formed a human chain  around the seats of the councillors in the Budapest City Council and thereby obstructed the proceedings. Holding hands, they sang Hungarian folk songs and recited poems, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the European Social Charter. They were the activists and supporters of the grassroots homeless advocacy group The City Is For All  who had engaged in this act of peaceful civil disobedience to protest – once again – the criminalisation of homelessness.

The city council was supposed to vote on – and upon the forceful removal of the activists by the police, voted on and passed – an ordinance which significantly expanded those areas of Budapest in which homelessness is illegal. Since mid-October, an amendment to the Law on Petty Offences  had made it illegal to sleep rough in world cultural heritage areas, which cover Budapest’s entire city-centre. Now there is a long and labyrinthine list of additional areas in Budapest where homeless people can be subjected to forceful removal and penalties, and other local authorities all around the country are also passing ordinances to outlaw homelessness. How did we get here?

The current punitive surge has its roots both in the former “socialist” regime as well as in the two decades following the transition to free-market capitalism and parliamentary democracy in 1989-1990. Before the transition, extensive social policies and full employment (for men) were complemented by punitive measures directed against those “living an idle or alcoholic lifestyle”. It was illegal to be unemployed or to be homeless. According to an ordinance issued in 1985, for example, anyone found homeless in public spaces was to be arrested. Homelessness was not abolished but punitive measures, accompanied by state censorship of the press and academia, made much of it invisible to the public, especially rough sleeping.

The disintegration of the socialist system led to a decline in economic output and to levels of unemployment comparable to those of the Great Depression. Deindustrialisation, impoverishment, a rapid increase in housing costs and the closure of nearly all workers’ hostels led to mass homelessness in Hungary. At the same time, however, earlier criminalising measures were abolished, civil rights were formally guaranteed, and an elaborate system of homeless assistance services emerged.

weiter: Heinrich Böll Stiftung

 

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