Prosecutors probe Hungary lawmaker's racist speech

Zsolt Barath of the far-right Jobbik party last week commemorated an 1882 disappearance that stoked anti-Semitic feelings in Hungary • Prosecutors can ask for Barath's parliamentary immunity to be stripped if they believe he incited against Jews.

צילום: AP // Prime Minister Viktor Orban said the government guaranteed the safety of all minorities in the country. [Archive]

Hungarian prosecutors said Wednesday they are investigating whether remarks made in parliament by a far right-wing lawmaker are anti-Semitic.

Geza Fazekas, spokesman for the Central Investigative Prosecutor's Office, said that a speech by Zsolt Barath of the far-right Jobbik party is being examined because of a complaint by Rabbi Slomo Koves, who believes the remarks made April 3 agitated against Hungary's Jewish community.

In a five-minute speech, Zsolt Barath of the far-right Jobbik party last week commemorated an 1882 disappearance that stoked anti-Semitic feelings in Hungary. Eszter Solymosi, a peasant girl from the eastern Hungarian village of Tiszaeszlar, disappeared in April of that year, with several Jews accused of her murder — only to be acquitted in 1884.

If prosecutors think there are grounds for investigating Barath for incitement against a community, they can ask for his parliamentary immunity to be removed, Fazekas said.

A proposal by the Socialist party, the largest opposition group, to set up a parliamentary ethics committee so lawmakers can be disciplined for racist, anti-Semitic, xenophobic or anti-Islamic remarks, was supported by Prime Minister Viktor Orban and most of the deputies from his Fidesz party.

Orban said the government guaranteed the safety of all minorities in the country.

"We will protect them, including the Jewish minority living in Hungary," Orban said Tuesday.

Jobbik won nearly 17 percent of the vote in the 2010 elections and is the largest opposition party after the Socialists. Its slipping popularity has been based on an extreme nationalist message with strong anti-Roma and anti-Semitic overtones.

An estimated 550,000 Hungarian Jews were killed during the Holocaust and now about 100,000 of the country's 10 million people are Jewish.

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