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Hungarian police said that they will not prosecute marchers in the Budapest Pride parade, despite the event being banned.
Hungarian police said that they will not pursue participants of the Pride parade, despite the event being banned. This year's Pride attracted a record crowd, with organizers reporting over 200,000 ...
This year's Pride attracted a record crowd, with organizers reporting over 200,000 participants.Police in Budapest announced ...
When Viktor Orban’s right-wing government passed a bill to ban Pride events – the organisers of Budapest’s annual march ...
The team behind the parade in Budapest went offline, meeting in private behind closed doors with everyone leaving their ...
EU Rule of Law Commissioner Michael McGrath on Tuesday praised the massive show of support for the rights of sexual ...
Budapest’s massive pride parade this year was momentous. It also highlighted the geographic and political obstacles facing ...
Mayor Gergely Karacsony and his team run Budapest based on Brussels’ expectations, while the real problems of Budapest ...
Pride organisers, including the Budapest city hall which co-hosted the march so it could go ahead, disputed the legality of the police ban, which also drew international condemnation.
Despite the ban, or precisely because of the ban, hundreds of thousands of people gathered in Hungary for Pride. But it's not just a fight for LGBTQ rights. Observers see in this strong protest the ...
The Environmental Protection Agency has reported that the water supply for half a million Irish people is at risk ...