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Home»News»Global Free Speech»Contents – The monster unleashed: How Hungary’s illiberal vision is seducing the western world
Global Free Speech

Contents – The monster unleashed: How Hungary’s illiberal vision is seducing the western world

News RoomBy News Room3 months agoNo Comments4 Mins Read1,682 Views
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Contents – The monster unleashed: How Hungary’s illiberal vision is seducing the western world
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Contents

Hungary has been on our radar for a long time. The prime minister Viktor Orbán is not an autocrat like Russia’s Vladimir Putin, but he has been slowly eroding his society’s democratic institutions and helping his Fidesz party allies take them over.

It’s meant not only that power is increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few billionaires, but that the public space for freedom of expression and pluralistic thought has been narrowed.

President Donald Trump’s MAGA movement has been fascinated with the Orbán model and how Hungary became what Orbán himself has described as an illiberal democracy. Many powerful MAGA figures would not only like the USA but also other countries in Europe to follow suit. Orbán is an ally who wants to weaken the principles on which the European project was founded.

Freedom of expression globally seems further away than ever as Israel, the USA and Iran are locked in a war spreading across the Gulf states. But we will continue to write about what is happening in the increasingly contested world of censorship.

Finally back to Hungary. The country goes to the polls in April and the opposition leader Péter Magyar is tipped to win, but we all fear the illiberal model is unlikely to die anytime soon.

Up Front

The monster unleashed: Sally Gimson
Hungary’s nightmare politics threaten to engulf Europe

The Index: Mark Stimpson
The latest in the world of free expression, including deep dives on Iran

Features

From police to Pussy Riot: Olga Borisova
A Russian activist recounts her path to dissent

Hot off the prison press: Poppy Askham
Mothers of jailed protesters are making unusual paper rounds in Georgia

Kill the messenger: Salil Tripathi
Angry mobs in Bangladesh are putting journalists’ lives in danger

Challenging the lion: Danson Kahyana
A Tanzanian cartoonist goes into hiding

Taking out the opposition: Kaya Genç
Social scientists exposing the Turkish president are under attack

I can imagine going anywhere: Ai Weiwei, an artist without a country: JP O’Malley, Ai Weiwei
Chinese artist Ai Weiwei knows a thing or two about censorship

Jailed for wearing a T-shirt: Sophie Wilkinson
When Moroccan authorities took offence to the slogan “Allah is lesbian”

The monster unleashed

Light at the end of the tunnel?: Viktória Serdült
Encrypted messages are piling up in Hungarian journalists’ inboxes

Orbán rewrites the Habsburg fairy tale: Victor Sebestyen
A careful re-crafting of the past is bolstering nationalism in Hungary

Hungary leads the far-right charge on free speech: Martin Bright 
Far-right hardliners unite in Brussels, with an Orbán-linked institution playing host

Europe worries a lot about Trump. Trump doesn’t think about Europe at all: Evan Sandsmark 
Is Trump’s America trying to destabilise Europe?

Orbán’s anti-culture club: Katie Dancey-Downs
Book censorship in Hungary is just the beginning of the attack on LGBTQ+ people

The island of freedom: Mark Stimpson
A ticket to the Hungarian music festival where free expression is celebrated

Dissent is in the icy air: Connor O’Brien
Index, a camera and the streets of Budapest

Orbanology: Márton Hegedűs
A new cartoon pulling apart the politics of division

Print your own news: Connor O’Brien
In Hungary, Samizdat is back in circulation

Comment

Don’t let labels mask the narrative: Akin Ajayi
An argument against using the word “genocide”

Unfinished revolutions: Roshaan Khattak
Exploring the links between Kenya and Balochistan

Indian cinema: propaganda at the pictures: Nilosree Biswas
The rise of anti-Muslim films

No unflattering portraits of the past, please: Jemimah Steinfeld
A global view of the countries sanitising history

Finding Annie on my mind: Sarah Hagger-Holt
The transformative moment of discovering a book about lesbians in the library

Culture

Escape to the woods: Alexandra Domenech
Russian theatre goes to the countryside

Like father like daughter: Katie Dancey-Downs
Kurt Vonnegut’s daughter Nanette is taking on the state of Utah

Growing up Russified: Connor O’Brien, Nina Kuryata
A Ukrainian author takes us back to her childhood, in this exclusive translation

Poems in the darkness: Mark Stimpson, Mohamed Tadjadit
Poetry by the jailed Algerian human rights activist in English for the first time

Totalitarianism on trial: Xue Yiwei, Jeffrey Wasserstrom
A chilling tale from China, published exclusively in Index

Should charities and music mix?: Rich Clarke
The inside track on War Child’s new album

 

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Photo by: Stephen Barnes/Medical/Alamy UK news this week is dominated by a damning report led by senior midwife Donna Ockenden that reveals how more than 500 mothers and babies were harmed or died at maternity units in Nottingham. This isn’t the first scandal Ockenden has investigated. A few years back terrible failings were revealed in Shropshire hospitals run by the Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust where 201 babies and nine mothers died.  We spoke to Ockenden for the magazine and she repeated this: “women aren’t listened to”. Another common thread was cover-up. Secrecy is not a one-off, it’s a pattern, wrote Martin Bright when he reported on the Shropshire scandal for Index. As Bright said, “this is not a historical story; it is an ongoing crisis”. Maternity scandals happen not only in Britain but all over the world. Last year’s protests in Morocco were ignited after eight women died in a maternity ward in Agadir because of severe medical neglect. In Egypt last week Omnia Sweidan, a former resident physician in obstetrics and gynaecology at Alexandria’s El-Shatby University Hospital, wrote a Facebook post detailing a series of abusive incidents faced by women at Alexandria’s Al-Shatby Hospital. It was read and shared by tens of thousands. Within 24 hours of posting, instead of the government declaring an investigation, security forces arrested Sweidan. While she was apparently later released, she’s been accused of spreading false news and misusing social media. She could end up in jail. Meanwhile, Afghanistan has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world – the figures of deaths and injuries are rising, but to what no one really knows. The Taliban won’t publish the data, probably to cover-up the true numbers. I’ve navigated maternity services myself in the UK. I’ve generally had good experiences and I’m very grateful to the NHS. But my experiences have not been uncomplicated – my daughter very nearly died. What saved her, I’ve been told, were a few factors – my race (white), my class (middle), where I live (London) and the fact that I relentlessly badgered those at my local hospital for weeks on end saying things didn’t feel right. Let me be clear here though: one shouldn’t have to be a dogged white Londoner to get good medical care. And a recent health committee report revealed terrible inequalities faced by people who are members of ethnic minorities, stating that “[B]abies that are Black or Black British Asian or Asian British have a more than 50% higher risk of perinatal mortality”. At Index we typically work on stories where dissidents take on the powerful: leaders, oligarchs and tech bros. The victims of maternity care scandals might not appear the same. But there is much that unites them. At the end of the day if the response you get from a doctor or nurse to a basic medical request is a shrug or a sneer, your free speech is being violated. If the systems view calls for accountability as dissent that must be silenced, then they are censoring. We grew up being told we’re lucky, that childbirth was one of the leading causes of death before the advent of modern medicine. For many of us that’s true. Just not all of us. That’s a travesty demanding urgent attention – in Nottingham and beyond. READ MORE

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