Tag: press freedoms
Trump Praises Hungary’s Anti-Semitic, Dictatorial Orban As ‘Like Me’

Trump Praises Hungary’s Anti-Semitic, Dictatorial Orban As ‘Like Me’

here he goes again …

Trump on Monday praised yet another authoritarian leader who has cracked down on democratic values in his home country.

“You’re respected all over Europe,” Trump told Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban during a photo-op in the Oval Office. “Probably like me a little bit controversial, but that’s OK, that’s OK. You’ve done a good job and you’ve kept your country safe.”

Let’s break down what “a little bit controversial” means.

Orban is anti-Semitic, using anti-Semitic tropes against Jewish philanthropist George Soros, and is trying to whitewash Hungary’s role in the Holocaust. And the president welcomed Orban as Trump himself is twisting words of Democratic members of Congress to try to accuse them of being anti-Jewish.

Orban has also cracked down on the free press in his country and has demanded funding from the European Union to build a fence between his country and Serbia to “[protect] all the citizens of Europe from the flood of illegal migrants.”

Orban’s visit has drawn bipartisan condemnation, with members of Congress against the optics of welcoming an authoritarian leader to the White House.

“Prime Minister Orban represents so many things that are antithetical to core American values,” reads a letter sent by 10 Democratic members of Congress to Trump on May 9, urging him not to meet with Orban. “He has overseen a rollback of democracy in his country, used anti-Semitic and xenophobic tropes in his political messaging, and cozied up to Vladimir Putin and the Kremlin.”

“He also has suppressed independent media and academic freedom in an effort to consolidate his increasingly autocratic rule,” the Democratic members of Congress wrote. “It troubles us to see the president of our country, which has historically supported the protection and promotion of democracy and human rights worldwide, meeting with a ban who so regularly disregards these values.”

Of course, Trump loves to praise dictatorial strongmen.

He congratulated Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan for an undemocratic power grab and has praised murderous Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte for his extrajudicial killings.

That’s not to mention Trump’s coziness with violent and oppressive North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, whom he has called a friend, and Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is openly hostile to democratic values and has attacked the United States’ bedrock value of free and fair elections.

In Orban, Trump admitted he sees a lot of himself.

And that’s a big self-own given that Orban is an anti-Semitic autocrat who wants to tamp down democracy.

Published with permission of The American Independent.

U.S. Envoy Targets Egypt At U.N. Over Journalist Arrests

U.S. Envoy Targets Egypt At U.N. Over Journalist Arrests

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – Attacking journalists and prosecuting critical voices fuels violent extremism rather than preventing it, the United States told the United Nations Security Council on Wednesday in a thinly veiled warning to Egypt, which chaired the meeting.

“Arresting journalists, sentencing reporters to death, treating media as an enemy of the state – such actions are thoroughly counterproductive,” said the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power.

Amid rising dissent against Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, police earlier this month raided the country’s press syndicate and arrested two journalists. On Saturday an Egyptian court recommended the death penalty for three journalists charged with endangering national security.

“Legal action is a critical tool in the campaign against ISIL (Islamic State) but it must not be wielded like a cudgel against those who voice unpopular speech or criticize authorities,” Power said.

“Such behavior doesn’t prevent violent extremism, it fuels it,” she said.

While she did not name Egypt, Power directed her comments at Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry, who chaired the Security Council meeting on countering terrorism because Egypt is president of the group for May.

Shoukry said Power’s comments were general and not directed toward Egypt, but that they had diluted the emphasis of the meeting. He met with Power privately on Tuesday.

“It is important that we keep a focus and that we send a clear message and do not confuse issues related to the battle against terrorism with other issues,” he told reporters after Power’s remarks. “We uphold the freedom of expression, we uphold the freedom of journalism.”

 

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Frances Kerry)

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