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German activist Maja T. goes on hunger strike in Hungary – DW – 06/06/2025
German activist Maja T. goes on hunger strike in Hungary – DW – 06/06/2025

DW

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • DW

German activist Maja T. goes on hunger strike in Hungary – DW – 06/06/2025

German anti-fascist activist Maja T., has been held in isolation in a Hungarian prison for one year now. The case highlights the state of the rule of law in Victor Orban's Hungary. "I can no longer endure the prison conditions in Hungary. My cell was under round-the-clock video surveillance for over three months. I always had to wear handcuffs outside my cell for over seven months," reads Maja T.'s statement. The non-binary German activist went on a hunger strike on June 5. "Non-binary" refers to individuals who identify as neither exclusively female nor male. People like Maja T.* generally have a hard time in Hungary, although it is a member state of the European Union (EU), which has anti-discrimination provisions. In 2021, Hungary first made legislative amendments to multiple laws, targeting LGBTQ+ individuals. In early 2025, under Viktor Orban's authoritarian rule, Hungary passed a law that can be used to ban Pride and similar events. At the start of the trial in Budapest, Maja T. was led into the courtroom on a leash Image: Denes Erdos/AP/dpa/picture alliance No hope of a fair trial Maja T. has long given up hope of a fair criminal trial and wants to use the hunger strike to force a return to Germany. In June 2024, T. was extradited from Germany to Hungary and has been in solitary confinement in a Budapest prison ever since. The activist's trial began there on February 21. The public prosecutor's office accuses the prisoner from Jena in Germany's eastern state of Thuringia of assaulting and seriously injuring several people in Budapest in February 2023. The victims had taken part in the so-called "Day of Honor," an annual march by neo-Nazis from all over Europe. At the start of the criminal proceedings, T. was led into the courtroom in handcuffs and shackles and on a leash. The public prosecutor's office offered T. the opportunity to enter a guilty plea and accept 14 years in prison without further proceedings. However, T. declined and instead made a six-page statement with clear criticism of Hungary: "It is a state that quite openly marginalizes and separates people because of their sexuality or gender. I am accused by a European state because I am an anti-fascist." T. did not comment on the content of the charges — multiple counts of grievous bodily harm. Maja T. could now face up to 24 years in prison under Hungarian law. A sentence passed by a German court is likely to be much more lenient. Hungary amends constitution to curb LGBTQ+ rights To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Extradition to Hungary was unlawful What makes the case particularly controversial is that T.'s extradition from Germany to Hungary was unlawful. This was ruled by the Federal Constitutional Court at the end of January. It expressly referred to the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (EU) and the associated ban on inhumane treatment. The court listed: Inadequate hygiene conditions, lack of access to hot water, bedbugs, poor and little food, extreme temperatures in winter and summer, poor lighting and ventilation in the cells, violence against prisoners by fellow prisoners and prison staff, and rule of law deficits. The Berlin Court of Appeal is responsible for the unlawful extradition. The Constitutional Court accuses the appeals court of ignoring current information on overcrowding and prison conditions in Hungarian prisons. A 'political trial' However, the successful constitutional complaint came too late: Maja T. had already been extradited. Maja T.'s father, Wolfram Jarosch, traveled to Budapest at the start of the trial to offer his 24-year-old child moral support. On the phone with DW, he described the criminal proceedings as a "political trial." "The worst thing is the solitary confinement," Jarosch said. However, he is impressed by his child's self-discipline: Physical exercise, reading and writing according to a daily and weekly schedule. "Nevertheless, I ultimately notice that Maja is suffering more and more under these conditions, both mentally and physically," he added. There have been demonstrations in Germany in support of Maja T. Image: Markus Scholz/dpa/picture alliance Several members of Germany's socialist Left Party are taking a keen interest in Maja T.'s case. Carola Rackete, Member of the European Parliament, has already visited twice and was able to talk to the security staff about the conditions of detention. She was told that the solitary confinement had been ordered "from above," she told DW. While the other inmates are housed in multi-bed cells and have communal access to the yard, Maja T. is in solitary confinement, allegedly because of her non-binary identity. Rackete believes it is unlikely that this will change. The MEP calls on German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and the German government to exert pressure on Hungary: If you seriously want to distance yourself from right-wing extremists and stand up for democratic values, you cannot stand idly by while Orban's regime destroys human lives in Hungarian courts, Rackete argues. No further extradition of suspected left-wing extremists Six suspected left-wing extremists, who had been in hiding and are also believed to have been involved in the attacks on suspected neo-Nazis in Budapest in 2023, were luckier than Maja T. The group voluntarily handed themselves in to the German authorities in January. They apparently do not have to fear extradition to Hungary, as the Federal Public Prosecutor's Office confirmed to DW on request. Accordingly, the public prosecutors responsible for the extradition proceedings were informed in writing that the investigations in Germany have priority. This means that, should charges be brought, the proceedings would take place in Germany. *Editor's note: DW follows the German press code, which stresses the importance of protecting the privacy of suspected criminals or victims and urges us to refrain from revealing full names in such cases. This article was originally written in German. While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter, Berlin Briefing.

German anti-fascist activist on trial in Hungary over alleged assault
German anti-fascist activist on trial in Hungary over alleged assault

Yahoo

time21-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

German anti-fascist activist on trial in Hungary over alleged assault

A German anti-fascist activist accused of allegedly participating in violent attacks against neo-Nazis went on trial on Friday in Hungary, as nationalist premier Viktor Orban has vowed to clamp down on "far-left violence". During a preliminary hearing, the 24-year-old activist -- who identifies as non-binary -- was led into a Budapest court room handcuffed and with feet shackled. The defendant, known as Maja T., is accused of four counts of attempted assault against far-right activists in February 2023. According to a court statement, the accused acted as part of a criminal organisation that "inflicted various life-threatening injuries" on the presumed neo-Nazis. Maja T. was handed over to Hungary last summer, a decision that was severely criticised by a German constitutional court earlier this month, which said it had failed to take into account potentially dangerous prison conditions in Hungary, especially for LGBTQ people. "I am accused in a country, where I do not exist as Maja," said the defendant in front of a packed courtroom, denouncing human rights violations in Hungary. According to the local news website Index, the German national complained about being placed in solitary confinement in a cell infested with cockroaches and bedbugs. Outside the court house, some anti-fascist protesters gathered to demand the defendant's release while chanting "Free Maja!" and holding up banners. - Dangerous prison conditions - Maja T. was arrested in Germany in 2023 and handed over to Hungarian authorities after a regional court in Berlin greenlit the extradition. But the German constitutional court in Karlsruhe said judges had not appropriately considered the conditions in Hungary's prisons -- including "overcrowding" -- and statements by Hungarian authorities were not "sufficient to rule out" torture and inhumane treatment. The 2023 attacks happened in the days preceding the so-called annual "Day of Honour" commemoration in Budapest, where European far-right groups gather to mark a failed attempt by Nazi forces in 1945 to break out of the city during the Soviet army's siege. Several activists have since been prosecuted in Hungary and could face prison sentences for the violence. One of them, Ilaria Salis, an Italian teacher, made international headlines when she appeared in a Budapest court in 2024, with her feet shackled. She has since been released from house arrest due to the immunity she obtained following her election to the EU parliament. Six people suspected of participating in the attacks in Budapest turned themselves in in Germany in a bid to avoid extradition to Hungary, their lawyers said. A second defendant in Maja T.'s case, an Italian activist named Gabriele Marchesi, was freed from prison after a Milanese court found there are risks of "inhumane and degrading treatment" in Hungarian prisons, according to Italian media reports. mg-ros/kym/cw

German anti-fascist activist on trial in Hungary over alleged assault
German anti-fascist activist on trial in Hungary over alleged assault

Yahoo

time21-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

German anti-fascist activist on trial in Hungary over alleged assault

A German anti-fascist activist accused of allegedly participating in violent attacks against neo-Nazis went on trial on Friday in Hungary, as nationalist premier Viktor Orban has vowed to clamp down on "far-left violence". During a preliminary hearing, the 24-year-old activist -- who identifies as non-binary -- was led into a Budapest court room handcuffed and with feet shackled. The defendant, known as Maja T., is accused of four counts of attempted assault against far-right activists in February 2023. According to a court statement, the accused acted as part of a criminal organisation that "inflicted various life-threatening injuries" on the presumed neo-Nazis. Maja T. was handed over to Hungary last summer, a decision that was severely criticised by a German constitutional court earlier this month, which said it had failed to take into account potentially dangerous prison conditions in Hungary, especially for LGBTQ people. "I am accused in a country, where I do not exist as Maja," said the defendant in front of a packed courtroom, denouncing human rights violations in Hungary. According to the local news website Index, the German national complained about being placed in solitary confinement in a cell infested with cockroaches and bedbugs. Outside the court house, some anti-fascist protesters gathered to demand the defendant's release while chanting "Free Maja!" and holding up banners. - Dangerous prison conditions - Maja T. was arrested in Germany in 2023 and handed over to Hungarian authorities after a regional court in Berlin greenlit the extradition. But the German constitutional court in Karlsruhe said judges had not appropriately considered the conditions in Hungary's prisons -- including "overcrowding" -- and statements by Hungarian authorities were not "sufficient to rule out" torture and inhumane treatment. The 2023 attacks happened in the days preceding the so-called annual "Day of Honour" commemoration in Budapest, where European far-right groups gather to mark a failed attempt by Nazi forces in 1945 to break out of the city during the Soviet army's siege. Several activists have since been prosecuted in Hungary and could face prison sentences for the violence. One of them, Ilaria Salis, an Italian teacher, made international headlines when she appeared in a Budapest court in 2024, with her feet shackled. She has since been released from house arrest due to the immunity she obtained following her election to the EU parliament. Six people suspected of participating in the attacks in Budapest turned themselves in in Germany in a bid to avoid extradition to Hungary, their lawyers said. A second defendant in Maja T.'s case, an Italian activist named Gabriele Marchesi, was freed from prison after a Milanese court found there are risks of "inhumane and degrading treatment" in Hungarian prisons, according to Italian media reports. mg-ros/kym/cw

Top German court says extradition of non-binary suspect to Hungary was unlawful
Top German court says extradition of non-binary suspect to Hungary was unlawful

Reuters

time06-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Reuters

Top German court says extradition of non-binary suspect to Hungary was unlawful

BERLIN, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Germany's Constitutional Court ruled on Thursday that it had been unlawful to extradite a German citizen who identifies as non-binary to Hungary, upholding her argument that the decision violated the European Union's Charter on Fundamental Rights. Under Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Hungary has introduced anti-LGBTQ+ policies, including laws that Brussels says discriminate against people on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. The person, identified by German media only as Maja T., is accused in Hungary of attacking suspected far-right sympathisers in Budapest in February 2023. The defendant is currently being held in a Hungarian jail after being arrested in Berlin in December 2023 on a European arrest warrant at Hungary's behest. The defendant was transferred to Hungary before the Constitutional Court could stop it with an injunction. In Thursday's ruling, Germany's top court upheld the defendant's appeal on the basis of Article 4 of the EU's Charter of Fundamental Rights, which states that no one will be subjected to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. "The constitutional complaint is successful," the ruling said, adding that the court which had allowed the extradition to go ahead had not sufficiently clarified the circumstances of detention that awaited the complainant in Hungary. Authorities in Hungary - an EU member but which has clashed with Brussels on a range of issues including LGBT rights and the rule of law - have given assurances that non-binary people are not subject to discrimination or violence in prisons there. It was not immediately clear whether Germany would ask Hungary to return its citizen.

Top German court says extradition of non-binary suspect to Hungary was unlawful
Top German court says extradition of non-binary suspect to Hungary was unlawful

Yahoo

time06-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Top German court says extradition of non-binary suspect to Hungary was unlawful

BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany's Constitutional Court ruled on Thursday that it had been unlawful to extradite a German citizen who identifies as non-binary to Hungary, upholding her argument that the decision violated the European Union's Charter on Fundamental Rights. Under Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Hungary has introduced anti-LGBTQ+ policies, including laws that Brussels says discriminate against people on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. The person, identified by German media only as Maja T., is accused in Hungary of attacking suspected far-right sympathisers in Budapest in February 2023. See for yourself — The Yodel is the go-to source for daily news, entertainment and feel-good stories. By signing up, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy. The defendant is currently being held in a Hungarian jail after being arrested in Berlin in December 2023 on a European arrest warrant at Hungary's behest. The defendant was transferred to Hungary before the Constitutional Court could stop it with an injunction. In Thursday's ruling, Germany's top court upheld the defendant's appeal on the basis of Article 4 of the EU's Charter of Fundamental Rights, which states that no one will be subjected to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. "The constitutional complaint is successful," the ruling said, adding that the court which had allowed the extradition to go ahead had not sufficiently clarified the circumstances of detention that awaited the complainant in Hungary. Authorities in Hungary - an EU member but which has clashed with Brussels on a range of issues including LGBT rights and the rule of law - have given assurances that non-binary people are not subject to discrimination or violence in prisons there. It was not immediately clear whether Germany would ask Hungary to return its citizen.

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