Hungary NGO hub faces closure amid government crackdown

01 Jul, 2017

A major NGO centre in Budapest said Friday could be forced to close after authorities withdrew its trading licences, in what observers say is another attack on US billionaire George Soros. Set in a shabby outer district of the Hungarian capital, the Jewish-run Aurora hub has been a key meeting place for non-governmental organisations representing minorities including Jews, Roma, refugees and the LGBT community.
The local municipality on Wednesday unexpectedly revoked the trading licenses for the centre's bar and catering areas, which the centre says generates 80 percent of its income. Earlier this month Hungarian MPs passed a tough law targeting foreign-funded non-governmental organisations, many of which are financed by the 86-year-old Soros. Populist Prime Minister Viktor Orban has accused the financier's Open Society Foundations (OSF) of orchestrating Europe's migration crisis and meddling in Hungarian politics.
The OSF supports several NGOs at Aurora, described as "the Soros headquarters in Hungary" by a pro-government website this week. Last month an ultra-nationalist group daubed anti-Soros graffiti on the Aurora building, days after British far-right figure Nick Griffin called it a "leftwing Jewish" venue during a speech in Budapest.
Authorities said the move to revoke the trading licences for the centre was due to a technical infringement and an ongoing probe after a police raid on June 10 that saw some 15 patrons at Aurora charged with minor drug possession. Police were simply "carrying out their legal duty," said a statement sent to AFP by Budapest police. But Aurora spokesman Aron Lukacs denied that the centre had broken any laws. He said the hub was the latest victim of the government's clampdown on civil society groups supported by Hungarian-born magnate Soros.

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