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Record numbers of people have marched in the Budapest Pride parade, defying a government ban that marked a major pushback against LGBTIQ+ rights in the European Union.
Organisers estimated up to 200,000 people took part in the 30th parade in the Hungarian capital, which was held in a festive atmosphere with rainbow flags flying high.
Those numbers far exceed the previous record turnout of 35,000 people and came in spite of a police ban imposed by Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s nationalist government.
The governing coalition amended its laws and the constitution this year to prohibit the annual celebration, citing “child protection” to justify the years-long clampdown on LGBTIQ+ rights.

But the opposition-run Budapest city hall decided to co-host the march so it could go ahead.

“I am proud to be gay and I am very scared that the government wants to bring us down,” one participant, 66-year-old Zoltan, told Agence France Presse.

“I am very surprised that there are so many people, I want to cry,” he added. He declined to give his full name.

‘Big embarrassment’ for Orban’s party

Orban said Friday that while police would not break up the Pride march, those who took part should be aware of “legal consequences”.
Parade organisers risk up to a year in prison, and attendees can face fines up to 500 euros ($897).
The latest legal changes also empower the authorities to use facial-recognition technology to identify those taking part, and cameras had recently been installed on lamp posts along the parade route.
Szabolcs Pek, lead analyst at research centre Iranytu Institute, said it would be difficult for Orban’s Fidesz party to respond to the high turnout.

“This is a big embarrassment for Fidesz,” he said.

HUNGARY-LGBTQ-RIGHTS-PRIDE

Romanian politician and vice-president of the European Parliament Nicolae Stefanuta stands between two women wearing masks of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban during the march. Source: AFP / Peter Kohalmi

The march began chaotically under a scorching sun. Marchers repeatedly had to pause to wait for police to stop traffic.

“I definitely wanted to come, if only to show my solidarity, and to show how important this issue is — not only to me, but to almost everyone living in Budapest,” economics student Marcell Szanto, 22, said.

Dozens of European lawmakers also attended in defiance of the ban.

Orban emboldened by Trump’s anti-diversity push

“Freedom and love can’t be banned,” read one huge poster put up near city hall, the gathering point for the march.
Earlier this week, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen called on the Hungarian authorities to reverse the ban.
Thirty-three nations, including most EU countries, have also released a statement in support of the march.
Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs in a post on X after the march claimed the opposition staged the parade “at Brussels’ command”.
“With Pride, the opposition incited against laws they don’t like, mocked Hungary’s sovereignty, and — with foreign backing — tried to force woke culture onto us,” he wrote.

Since Orban’s return to power in 2010, the country of 9.6 million people has been steadily rolling back LGBTIQ+ rights.

It is the first EU nation to ban a Pride march, and Orban has said he has been emboldened by the anti-diversity push by US President Donald Trump.
Some people also gathered along the route to protest LGBTIQ+ rights, in demonstrations called by far-right groups, one of which featured a wooden cross adorned with protest messages.
But opposition leader Peter Magyar said on Facebook that the government “scored not a goal, but a huge own goal with their attempt to ban today’s event”.
Budapest mayor Gergely Karacsony in a post noting the big turnout thanked Orban “for advertising for a more tolerant society”.
One woman, who gave only her first name, Katalin, said she agreed with the ban though she didn’t want any clashes.
“Disgusting… it’s become a fad to show off ourselves,” she said.

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