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With the 2026 parliamentary elections approaching, the annual Budapest Pride Parade seemed poised to become the next fight ...
Two weeks after Budapest Pride persisted in the face of government threats, an organizer expressed tentative relief at the ...
Organisers estimate up to 200,000 people marched after government banned the annual celebration. Tens of thousands of people have marched for LGBTQ rights in the Hungarian capital, Budapest, defying a ...
Beneath a blaze of rainbow flags and amid roars of defiance, big crowds gathered in the Hungarian capital Budapest for the city’s 30th annual Pride march – an event that, this year, is unfolding as ...
BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Around 100,000 people defied a government ban and police orders Saturday to march in what organizers called the largest LGBTQ+ Pride event in Hungary's history in an open ...
Budapest Pride took place as planned despite new anti-Pride laws passed in March and heavy-handed police tactics aimed at ...
Activists who slam Islamophobia are silent on homophobia in some Islamic groups. But human rights are not a one-way street So ...
Tens of thousands marched in Budapest Saturday, boldly defying a new law by Prime Minister Viktor Orban's ruling coalition that bans Hungary's annual Pride celebrations. The revellers kicked off ...
The local government's Freedom Day event ended without incidents, with no police intervention, and counter-demonstrators being kept away.
Critics see the move to ban the march scheduled for this weekend as part of a wider crackdown on democratic freedoms.
An estimated 100,000 people marched in Budapest in Hungary's largest-ever LGBTQ+ Pride event in open defiance of a government ban.
Marchers gambled with potential police intervention and heavy fines to participate in the 30th annual Budapest Pride, which was outlawed in March by Orbán’s right-wing populist governing party.