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Hungary's conservative government now bans public pride events organized by LGBT activists after passing a new constitutional amendment designed to protect children from gender ideology.
Hungary’s second-largest bookstore, Lira, said on Friday it plans to take legal action after it received a hefty government fine for the sale of an LGBT-themed British webcomic and graphic novel ...
Hungary has passed a constitutional amendment allowing authorities to ban LGBT+ public events such as Pride marches – a move seen as another step toward authoritarianism by the country’s ...
The fresh fine comes just days ahead of a Pride march in Budapest on Saturday. The European Commission referred Hungary to the Court of Justice of the EU over the anti-LGBT law in mid-2022.
The U.S. Ambassador to Hungary hasn’t exactly been embraced by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s government. But now, it seems, things are getting petty.David Pressman, a gay human rights lawyer who acts ...
Hungary's government has banned youngsters under 18 from visiting the World Press Photo exhibition on display in Budapest, citing LGBT content in some of the photos.
Hungary’s annual Pride march, which is part of the Budapest Pride Festival, usually takes place on the first Saturday of July. The newly amended law will target not only the organizers of Pride ...
Hungary's government dismissed the director of the National Museum on Monday after it allowed under-18s to visit a World Press Photo exhibition featuring LGBT content that it is hosting despite a ...
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Hungary to vote on ‘fascist’ anti-LGBT+ and trans law - MSNHungary to vote on ‘fascist’ anti-LGBT+ and trans law – what does it mean for other basic rights? - Opposition parties say the law takes Hungary ‘down the Putin road’ ...
Hungary on Thursday fined one of the country's largest booksellers for selling a British webcomic and graphic novel without closed wrapping, saying this breached a 2021 law that bans disseminating ...
The fresh fine comes just days ahead of a Pride march in Budapest on Saturday. The European Commission referred Hungary to the Court of Justice of the EU over the anti-LGBT law in mid-2022.
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