George Soros upset by 'antisemitic' campaign against him in Hungary | World news
George Soros, the billionaire financier, has criticised an anti-immigration campaign run by the Hungarian government as âantisemiticâ.
âI am distressed by the current Hungarian regimeâs use of antisemitic imagery as part of its deliberate disinformation campaign,â the 86-year-old said in a rare statement.
The posters used in the media campaign show a large picture of the Hungarian-born Jewish emigre laughing, alongside the text: âLetâs not let Soros have the last laughâ, a reference to government claims that Soros wants to force Hungary to allow in migrants.
Since the posters appeared on billboards and at public spaces around the country last week, as well as on television, several incidents of antisemitic graffiti such as âStinking Jewâ or Stars of David daubed on them have been reported.
Hungaryâs largest Jewish organisation, Mazsihisz, has called on prime minister Viktor Orbán to stop the campaign, with its head Andras Heisler writing that the âpoisonous messages harm the whole of Hungaryâ.
Some opposition activists and citizens have also begun taking down some of the posters from billboards.
Soros, who has dual Hungarian-American citizenship, said he was âheartened that together with countless fellow citizens the leadership of the Hungarian Jewish communityâ have spoken out.
Earlier on Tuesday his spokesperson Michael Vachon called the campaign âreminiscent of Europeâs darkest hoursâ with âclearly antisemitic overtonesâ.
Those defacing the posters with graffiti â(understood) the governmentâs intent,â he said.
âThe government has consistently and wilfully misrepresented Sorosâs views on migration and refugees,â he added.
On Friday Orbán accused Soros of being a âbillionaire speculatorâ who wanted to use his wealth and civil groups that he supports to âsettle a million migrantsâ in the European Union.
Orban and government officials say that Hungary has a policy of âzero toleranceâ of antisemitism, and that the poster campaign is about increasing awareness of the ânational security riskâ posed by Soros.
On Saturday, Israelâs ambassador in Budapest Yossi Amrani also criticised the poster campaign, saying it âevokes sad memories but also sows hatred and fearâ.
But late on Sunday â" reportedly at the request of prime minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs office â" Israelâs foreign ministry issued a separate âclarificationâ that criticism of Soros was legitimate.
This said that while Israel âdeploresâ antisemitism, Soros âcontinuously undermines Israelâs democratically elected governments by funding organisations that defame the Jewish state and seek to deny it the right to defend itself.â
Netanyahu is due to visit Hungary next week, the first visit by an Israeli prime minister since the end of communism in 1989.
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