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Soros says Hungarian government lying in attacks against him

Soros says Hungary's government lies in attacks against him

By Marton Dunai

BUDAPEST (Reuters) - U.S. financier George Soros on Monday denounced a Hungarian government campaign against him as "distortions and lies" designed to create a false external enemy.
Soros, 86, is a Hungarian-born Jew whose longtime support for liberal and open-border values in eastern Europe have put him at odds with right-wing nationalists, in particular the government of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
Orban, who faces elections in April 2018, last month sent to voters seven statements attributed to Soros that, among other things, called for the European Union to settle a million migrants a year and pay each of them thousands of euros.
"The statements ... contain distortions and outright lies that deliberately mislead Hungarians about George Soros's views on migrants and refugees," said a statement issued by Soros's Open Society Foundations.
"With Hungary's health care and education systems in distress and corruption rife, the current government has sought to create an outside enemy to distract citizens. The government selected George Soros for this purpose," it said.
The ruling Fidesz party's vice chairman said Soros was engaged in a "frontal assault" against Hungary.
"What Soros writes about immigration, in general, is a pro-immigration stance that is open about its disdain for the nation state," Gergely Gulyas told a news conference. "Decisions made in Brussels echo that in the field of immigration policy."
"Days before a recent immigration decision in the European Parliament Soros was meeting with the rapporteur on the subject as well as five different EU commissioners. I am not a conspiracy theorist but this holds some clues."
Soros said each of the seven statements was a distortion or lie, refuting them one by one. It said Soros proposed admitting an annual 300,000 refugees to the EU only while strengthening European border controls and making migrant relocations within the bloc voluntary, not mandatory as Budapest asserted.
It said Soros proposed no payments to migrants, rather EU subsidies to member states to help them cope with migration.

"LIE"
To three other proposals attributed to Soros - that he wanted milder criminal sentences for migrants, to push national cultures and languages into the background to facilitate easier integration of migrants and sanctions against countries that oppose migration, the Open Society statement said, "Nowhere has Soros made any such statement(s). This is a lie."
Orban once received a Soros grant to study at Britain's Oxford University but later turned against the billionaire philanthropist, vilifying him as an alleged mastermind of a global agenda to weaken nation states.
The election campaign of Orban's Fidesz party has built on a series of billboards warning Hungarians, "Don't let Soros have the last laugh" and showing a laughing Soros in black and white. Some of the billboards have had "stinking Jew" scrawled on them.
The billboards, along with calls from Orban to preserve Hungary's "ethnic homogeneity" and his endorsement of a World Two Hungarian leader who allied with Nazi Germany, drew accusations of anti-Semitism earlier this year.
Alluding to the billboards and to Orban's rejection of immigration, especially from Muslim nations, the Open Society Foundations accused Budapest of "stoking anti-Muslim sentiment and employing anti-Semitic tropes reminiscent of the 1930s".
Fidesz pulled the billboard campaign just before a July visit to Budapest by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Orban vowed to fight anti-Semitism.
The government has denied its campaign was anti-Semitic, and re-launched the billboards in the autumn in promoting a "national consultation" with voters.
Gulyas said it was "outrageous" that Soros called the campaign anti-Semitic. Immigration which Soros supported was bringing hundreds of thousands of people into Europe whose cultural background was inimical to Jewsm he said.
"It is not us who should be facing anti-Semitism charges," he said, adding that Fidesz also had nothing against Muslim culture but was against mass immigration of people with a different cultural background to Hungary's Christian roots.

(Reporting by Marton Dunai; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Richard Balmforth)