Sunday, October 8th., 2017
'Soros Plan': Why Hungarian PM Blasts US Billionaire
for Destabilizing Europe
The
standoff between George Soros and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban
is raging on: The European Commission has recently issued yet another
ultimatum to Budapest over the country's nongovernmental organization
and education laws, which are allegedly targeting Soros's entities in
Hungary. The country's ruling Fidesz party strikes back.
Hungarian
Prime Minister Viktor Orban appears to be the last obstacle in the way
of George Soros's plan to "reconstruct" Europe, experts say.
On Wednesday, Reuters
reported
that the European Commission (EC) increased legal action
against Budapest over "restrictions on foreign funding," which are
"likely to affect civil society groups funded by the billionaire
investor George Soros." According to the official statement, EC reserves
the right to "refer the case to the Court of Justice of the EU."
Hungarian NGO Law 'Targeting George Soros'
A Hungarian law passed in June 2017 stipulates that nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs), which receive more than 24,000 euros a year
from abroad should provide a list of their external sponsors and undergo
a special registration as "organizations benefiting from foreign
financing."
According to the Hungarian prime minister, the
legislation is aimed at targeting money laundering and terrorism
funding. However, The Atlantic
writes that "the law is… widely seen as targeting George Soros" in the first place.
The
recent conflict between Orban and the Hungarian-born American magnate
has been gaining pace since April 2017, when new educational legislation
posing a
challenge to the Soros-founded Central European University (CEU) in Hungary was inked by President Janos Ader.
The law requires foreign accredited universities to provide
educational services in the countries of their origin and bans them
from awarding Hungarian diplomas in the absence of an agreement
between Hungary and a country of accreditation.
Although the CEU is accredited in the United States it does not
provide any educational services there. Besides, there is no legally
binding bilateral agreement between Budapest and Washington, as required
by the new law.
In the eyes of the European Commission the NGO and education laws
contradict the bloc's democratic principles. Thus, in July 2017 the EU
issued a one-month
ultimatum to Hungary, threatening Budapest with possible sanctions in court.
2015 'Soros Plan': Flooding Europe With Migrants
However, there is yet another "apple of discord" between the
Hungarian government on the one side and the influential American
billionaire and his EU allies on the other.
The country's ruling Fidesz party has recently launched
a "national consultation"
on the so-called "Soros plan" allegedly aimed at flooding Europe
with migrants. The national consultations have been held in Hungary
since 2011: The country's government sends questionnaires seeking
to determine the popular opinion on the most burning issues.
"The European Commission stops just short
of saying that they carry out the Soros plan… but all their steps and
ideas with regard to migration point in this direction," Fidesz's vice
chairman Lajos Kosa said as
quoted by Reuters.
©
Flickr/ Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung
The
statement apparently came as a response to the September ruling by the
European Court of Justice, which rejected Slovakia and Hungary's
complaints against the EU refugee quota plan. Earlier, Budapest and
Bratislava appealed to the bloc's top court to reconsider Brussels'
decision to share out 120,000 asylum seekers across the union.
Speaking about the "Soros plan" the Hungarian ruling party refers to the billionaire's
article "Rebuilding the Asylum System" published on September 26, 2015, during the peak of the migrant crisis on the old continent.
In his op-ed Soros outlined what he called "a
comprehensive plan," which envisaged that the EU had to accept "at least
a million asylum-seekers annually for the foreseeable future" and
"share the burden fairly."
The billionaire insisted that "the EU should provide €15,000
($16,800) per asylum-seeker for each of the first two years to help
cover housing, health care, and education costs" and offer "adequate
funding to Lebanon, Jordan, and Turkey to support the 4 million refugees
currently living in those countries."
In the end of his article
Soros lambasted Viktor Orban's
approach to the refugee crisis, claiming that the Hungarian prime
minister's vision "subordinates the human rights of asylum-seekers and
migrants to the security of borders" and thus "threatens to divide and
destroy the EU."
Why Viktor Orban's Positions Remain Strong
Despite the attacks from Brussels and the American billionaire,
Viktor Orban's political positions remain strong "because he acts as an
active champion of national interests on the issue of migration,"
Alexander Stykalin, a researcher at the Institute of Slavic and Balkan
Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS)
told RT.
According to the Russian academic, "if there were elections in the country, [Orban] would most likely win again."
For her part, Russian political analyst Anna Aryamova pointed
out that Orban's concerns about the migration problem are quite
justified: "This mass migration spells danger for European countries,
[in particular] for their economy and social sphere."
She explained that "thus Europe is paying for the aggressive US
policy" in the Middle East and North Africa. The migrant flow from the
countries destabilized by Washington plays into America's hand,
according to the political analyst: The tension simmering in the wartorn
regions is being exported to Europe, not the US.
"Soros's [Open Society] Foundations is a global project that is seeking to
influence global political processes,"
Aryamova told RT. "Apart from this fund, there are many American
organizations operating in Europe, but Soros is managing the largest
financial flows and therefore he is attracting the most attention."