By Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
Victor Orban hates liberal western values
and makes no secret of it. Of late, this has led to a major
row with Michael Ignatieff, Canada’s former Liberal Party
leader, and American financier George Soros.
The fate of the Central European University
(CEU), located in Budapest, hangs in the balance and its
future will depend on which side prevails.
Orban, Hungary’s prime minister since 2010,
is trying to shut down the school. It’s all part of a larger
battle he’s waging against western institutions. He has also
ordered a crackdown on foreign-funded non-governmental
organisations, or NGOs.
A new law passed in June requires NGOs that
receive more than $26,000-a-year from overseas to register
with the authorities and to declare their “foreign status”
online and in all press kits and publications.
Critics say the law is intended mainly to
stifle independent points of view and to stigmatize as
unpatriotic those groups that receive support from western
philanthropists and foundations.
Orban has especially focused on those NGOs
funded by the Open Society Foundations, the international
grant-making network founded by the Hungarian-born Soros. He
considers them a “mafia-style operation” with paid political
activists who threaten national sovereignty.
They “serve global capitalists and back
political correctness over national governments,” remarked
Szilard Németh, a vice-president of the ruling party Fidesz.
“In
Hungary the national government is under continuous pressure
and attacks,” Orban stated in April, so what is at stake “is
whether we will have a parliament and government serving the
interests of Hungarian people” or “foreign interests.”
He called Soros an “American financial
speculator attacking Hungary” who has “destroyed the lives of
millions of Europeans.”
Soros in turn has denied he was trying to
interfere in Hungarian politics. “He sought to frame his
policies as a personal conflict between the two of us,” Soros
said about Orban at the annual economic forum of the European
Commission, the EU’s executive arm, in June.
Orban’s government has for years tried to
gain control of the country’s institutions of higher
education. It now appoints powerful chancellors and tries to
shape what is taught.
But the CEU remained beyond his reach.
Founded in 1991, soon after Hungary emerged from decades of
Communist rule, and financially supported by Soros, it
operates mainly in English and concentrates on post-graduate
education.
Its focus has been global, with a special
emphasis on democracy promotion and human rights around the
world.
In 2016, Ignatieff became the university’s
fifth president. He has a longstanding connection to Hungary,
and his wife, Zsuzsanna Zsohar, is Hungarian-born.
“Dr. Ignatieff is a scholar and policy
practitioner and as such is ideally suited to lead CEU in
these challenging times,” remarked Soros at the time.
But the Hungarian government has accused
the university of trying to undermine Hungary’s political
culture. Fidesz has referred to the CEU as “Soros university,”
and sees it as a bastion of liberalism and privilege.
The university has an endowment of over 500
million euros (over $740 million), in a country where incomes
are well below the European Union average.
In April the Hungarian parliament voted in
favour of legislation which places tough restrictions on
foreign-registered universities. It requires them to have a
campus both in the capital and their home countries; the CEU
only has a campus in Budapest and none in the United States.
Those working at the CEU will in future
require work permits, which the institution says will limit
its ability to hire staff.
Ignatieff and the university have secured
the support of the European Union, which has launched legal
action against Hungary over its new law, claiming that the
bill violated fundamental EU values such as academic freedom.
In May, a majority in the European
Parliament voted for a resolution asking Hungary to repeal the
law. As well, Isabelle Poupart, Canada’s ambassador in
Budapest, said in a statement that Canada was “seriously
concerned” about the new law.
But Hungary has not backed down. “The
regulation of higher education is a member-state competency,
not the EU’s,” responded Zoltan Kovacs, a Hungarian government
spokesman.
“All
this seems like a co-ordinated attack not just on academic
freedom but on freedom of association, and, finally, on
democratic freedom,” contends Liviu Matei, provost of the CEU.
For the first time in Europe since the Second World War, a
university will have been closed for political reasons.
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