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Hungary police oust protestors from WWII monument site

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Police in Hungary forcibly removed protestors on Tuesday from the site of a planned World War II monument which Jewish critics say glosses over the country's role in the Holocaust.

Organisers of the sitdown protest said police physically lifted over 20 people, including a number of Holocaust survivors, from the planned site of the monument in the capital, Budapest.

The government says the structure -- which will depict Hungary as an angel being attacked by a German eagle -- will commemorate all the victims of the country's occupation by Nazi Germany.

But several Jewish organisations and historians say the memorial absolves Hungarians of their active role in carrying out the deportations of Jews to Nazi death camps.

Some 600,000 Hungarian Jews perished during the Holocaust, almost all after the German occupation began on March 19 1944.

Building work on the monument started on April 8, two days after Prime Minister Viktor Orban won a second consecutive landslide election, and since then protestors have been trying to block construction.

The memorial is due to be completed by May 31.

Former chief rabbi of Tel-Aviv  Israel Meir Lau (L)  talks with Hungary's President Janos Ader pri...
Former chief rabbi of Tel-Aviv, Israel Meir Lau,(L), talks with Hungary's President Janos Ader prior the ceremonies at the memorial to the 6 million Holocaust victims from the former German Nazi death camp in Auschwitz on April 28, 2014
Janek Skarzynski, AFP/File

Hungary's largest Jewish organisation, Mazsihisz, has criticised Orban for breaking a pledge to discuss the monument with them.

Protest organiser Gabor Popper told AFP the demonstrators knew they could not stop the monument being built.

"If the government really wants to build it, and it seems they do, then the most we can do is somehow delay its construction," he said.

Earlier Tuesday, former prime minister and opposition politician Gordon Bajnai sent an open letter to Hungarian president Janos Ader asking him to "do everything he can" to stop the monument being built.

Police in Hungary forcibly removed protestors on Tuesday from the site of a planned World War II monument which Jewish critics say glosses over the country’s role in the Holocaust.

Organisers of the sitdown protest said police physically lifted over 20 people, including a number of Holocaust survivors, from the planned site of the monument in the capital, Budapest.

The government says the structure — which will depict Hungary as an angel being attacked by a German eagle — will commemorate all the victims of the country’s occupation by Nazi Germany.

But several Jewish organisations and historians say the memorial absolves Hungarians of their active role in carrying out the deportations of Jews to Nazi death camps.

Some 600,000 Hungarian Jews perished during the Holocaust, almost all after the German occupation began on March 19 1944.

Building work on the monument started on April 8, two days after Prime Minister Viktor Orban won a second consecutive landslide election, and since then protestors have been trying to block construction.

The memorial is due to be completed by May 31.

Former chief rabbi of Tel-Aviv  Israel Meir Lau (L)  talks with Hungary's President Janos Ader pri...

Former chief rabbi of Tel-Aviv, Israel Meir Lau,(L), talks with Hungary’s President Janos Ader prior the ceremonies at the memorial to the 6 million Holocaust victims from the former German Nazi death camp in Auschwitz on April 28, 2014
Janek Skarzynski, AFP/File

Hungary’s largest Jewish organisation, Mazsihisz, has criticised Orban for breaking a pledge to discuss the monument with them.

Protest organiser Gabor Popper told AFP the demonstrators knew they could not stop the monument being built.

“If the government really wants to build it, and it seems they do, then the most we can do is somehow delay its construction,” he said.

Earlier Tuesday, former prime minister and opposition politician Gordon Bajnai sent an open letter to Hungarian president Janos Ader asking him to “do everything he can” to stop the monument being built.

AFP
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