M&C News : Jewish group complains to EU presidency about Hungary’s far-right

Hungary’s far-right party Jobbik was singled out for criticism at a meeting between a leading Jewish lobby group and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, whose country holds the European Union presidency, officials said.

European Jewish Congress (EJC) president Moshe Kantor raised his concerns with Orban in Brussels on Tuesday, on the occasion of Holocaust Memorial Day.

‘Parties like Jobbik stand in direct opposition to the values of the European Union that Hungary now preside over,’ Kantor said, according to an ECJ statement released Wednesday. ‘The EU presidency could be utilized as a great opportunity for Hungary to lead the way against all manifestations of extremism and hatred.’

The EJC warned against ‘a dramatic escalation in anti-Semitism in Europe,’ claiming that Jews in Europe ‘are feeling unsafe’ and are ‘leaving en masse’ certain areas such as the Swedish town of Malmo, where there is a high concentration of Muslim migrants.

Jobbik, which gathered 16.7 per cent of votes in national elections last year and is currently in the opposition, refutes accusations of being anti-Jew as ‘absurd,’ but acknowledges its sympathy for the Palestinian cause in the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Kantor said that calls for sanctions or a boycott on Israel over its settlement policy on occupied Palestinian land ‘should be seen as unacceptable,’ and official organizations supporting them ‘should be outlawed.’

He charged that such appeals amounted to a ‘new antisemitism.’

The EU’s official policy is that Israel’s continued settlement building is in breach of international law, but the bloc has stopped short of reacting with diplomatic sanctions.

Last month, a group of ex-EU leaders, including the bloc’s former foreign policy chief Javier Solana, called for a freeze in talks to upgrade EU-Israeli relations and for excluding Israeli produce from occupied Palestinian land from preferential trade treatment.

related

Subscribe to EJC newsletter

Get EJC's bi-weekly newsletter, including the latest statements and news from the European Jewish communities, direct to your inbox.

European Jewish Congress will use the information you provide on this form to contact you. We will treat your information with respect and will not share it with others. By clicking Subscribe, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with these terms.

Statements

EJC President Dr Moshe Kantor’s op-ed in Euractiv: “They say they are targeting ‘Zionists’, but they are targeting Jews”

“Antisemitism has always served as an early warning sign of the health of a society. When hatred towards Jews is tolerated and normalised, it rarely stops there. It spreads outward, threatening all sections of society and undermining democratic values,” writes EJC President Dr Moshe Kantor in the aftermath of the attack on a synagogue in Liège, Belgium.