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Thousands Protest Against Hungary's Orban After Leaks of Graft Case Tape


Peter Magyar, a lawyer and businessman formerly close to Hungary's ruling nationalist government, delivers a speech during a protest demanding the chief prosecutor Peter Polt and Prime Minister Viktor Orban to resign, in Budapest, Hungary, March 26, 2024.
Peter Magyar, a lawyer and businessman formerly close to Hungary's ruling nationalist government, delivers a speech during a protest demanding the chief prosecutor Peter Polt and Prime Minister Viktor Orban to resign, in Budapest, Hungary, March 26, 2024.

Thousands of people protested in Budapest near parliament on Tuesday demanding the chief prosecutor and Prime Minister Viktor Orban resign after a former government insider accused a senior aide to Orban of trying interfere in a graft case.

Protesters marched from the chief prosecutor's office toward parliament shouting "Resign, resign," with many carrying torches.

Peter Magyar earlier published a recording of a conversation with Judit Varga, then his wife and Hungary's justice minister, in which she detailed an attempt by aides to Orban's cabinet chief to remove certain parts from documents in a graft case.

The case is centered on former justice ministry state secretary Pal Volner, who was charged in 2022 with accepting bribes from the former head of the Court Bailiffs, Gyorgy Schadl. Both have pleaded not guilty. Prosecutors are seeking jail terms for the pair.

Prosecutors said in a statement they would analyze the tape, which Magyar said he recorded in January 2023, and further evidence would be collected.

"It is legally and physically impossible to eliminate and meddle into prosecution documents," the statement said.

Prosecutors were scheduled to hold a press conference on Thursday.

The allegations come at a politically sensitive time for Orban ahead of European parliamentary elections in June, and follow a sex abuse scandal that brought down two of Orban's political allies - the former president and the former justice minister Judit Varga - last month.

Magyar, 43, a lawyer formerly close to the government, plans to launch a new party to challenge Orban.

"Hungarians thank you ... for coming in the thousands tonight ... to tell those in power that we have had enough," he told protesters in a speech.

On the audio tape, recorded in the then-couple's home, and published on Magyar's Facebook page, Varga says aides linked to cabinet chief minister Antal Rogan suggested to prosecutors what should be deleted from documents related to the Volner/Schadl case.

"They told the prosecutors what should be deleted but they (prosecutors) did not entirely follow up on that," Varga is heard on the tape as saying.

Former justice minister Varga, who could not be reached for comment, did not dispute the authenticity of the tape in a post on her Facebook page.

"Peter Magyar made a secret recording of his former spouse, me, in our home and now used this to achieve his political goals. He is not worthy of anybody's trust," she wrote.

Government spokesperson Zoltan Kovacs declined to reply to emailed questions from Reuters about the content of the recording, commenting: "Much ado about nothing."

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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