Viktor Orban is accused of burning Hungarian opposition voices when charred ballot papers were found in Romania

Viktor Orban is accused of burning Hungarian opposition voices when charred ballot papers were found in Romania

Hungary's opposition leader yesterday demanded the cancellation of all letter elections for the parliamentary elections on Sunday, after reports that were found in Romania.

"Now we have caught her," said Péter Márki-Zay, the chairman of the opposition coalition of six parties. "You are afraid of losing that you are not afraid of the most obvious fraud."

Romanian media said that the charred ballot papers were found in a sack surrounded by rubble on an illegal landfill near Târgu Mureș.

All votes went to the opposition parties, although a large majority of the letter voters from abroad normally vote for the ruling Fidesz party.

"They literally wanted to destroy the will of the voters," said Mr. Márki-Zay.

fidesz, the government party, said, "The desperate left" attempts to "destroy the voices of all Hungary living in the surrounding countries".

The left is "capable of the most hideous things," it said.



Hungary who live abroad may choose by postal voting by reforms by Viktor Orban, the Prime Minister and Chairman of Fidesz.

In 2010, Mr. Orban introduced a simplified naturalization process for ethnic Hungarians before giving around 2.2 million in neighboring countries like Romania.

About 90 percent of these people voted for the right party in previous elections, the website "Hungary today" reported.

The leader of the strong man is accused of undermining democratic standards and waging war against the rights of homosexuals and media freedom.

Before the invasion of Ukraine in February, Fidesz was on the same with the opposition coalition in the surveys, but now she is ahead.

Fourth victory in a row

Mr. Orban, who will probably triumph in a fourth election in a row, said hundreds of his followers at his last rally before the elections on Sunday that the war in Ukraine had "changed everything".

He campaigned to keep Hungary out of the conflict and belonged to the countries that blocked EU sanctions against Russian oil and gas exports.

"The left believes that Ukraine is waging our war," said Orbán, "we can't win anything with that, we can only lose."

"to send weapons to Ukraine, which the opposition wants, could only contribute to violence," said Rosa, a 19-year-old Fidesz voter from Budapest, who only called her first name.

Mr. Márki-Zay, the chairman of the opposition coalition of six parties, fought on a pro-EU platform. His accusations that Mr. Orban is too close to Mr. Putin have not prevailed in Hungary, where the support for Fidesz is strong.

"We don't want to be involved and Orbán is determined to protect us. He does not want to deliver our boys to this conflict," said Fidesz supporter Hanna, who did not want to give her last name.

"As for the opposition, now, it will simply do what Brussels tells them," she said at the rally.

Source: The Telegraph

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