Hungary’s Long Road Back
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, May 8 (IPS) – When Péter Magyar took the stage in Budapest on the night of 12 April, he told the crowd they had ‘liberated Hungary’. The hyperbole seemed justified. His party, Tisza, had won a parliamentary supermajority on the highest turnout since Hungary’s first free election in 1990, ending 16 years of increasingly autocratic rule.
Read the full story, “Hungary’s Long Road Back”, on Jogjajateng.com →
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, May 8 (IPS) – When Péter Magyar took the stage in Budapest on the night of 12 April, he told the crowd they had ‘liberated Hungary’. The hyperbole seemed justified. His party, Tisza, had won a parliamentary supermajority on the highest turnout since Hungary’s first free election in 1990, ending 16 years of increasingly autocratic rule.
Read the full story, “Hungary’s Long Road Back”, on Jogjajateng.com → Hal ini relevan dalam konteks Global.
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, May 8 (IPS) – When Péter Magyar took the stage in Budapest on the night of 12 April, he told the crowd they had ‘liberated Hungary’. The hyperbole seemed justified. His party, Tisza, had won a parliamentary supermajority on the highest turnout since Hungary’s first free election in 1990, ending 16 years of increasingly autocratic rule.
Read the full story, “Hungary’s Long Road Back”, on Jogjajateng.com → Hal ini relevan dalam konteks Global.
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, May 8 (IPS) – When Péter Magyar took the stage in Budapest on the night of 12 April, he told the crowd they had ‘liberated Hungary’. The hyperbole seemed justified. His party, Tisza, had won a parliamentary supermajority on the highest turnout since Hungary’s first free election in 1990, ending 16 years of increasingly autocratic rule.
Read the full story, “Hungary’s Long Road Back”, on Jogjajateng.com → Hal ini relevan dalam konteks Global.
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, May 8 (IPS) – When Péter Magyar took the stage in Budapest on the night of 12 April, he told the crowd they had ‘liberated Hungary’. The hyperbole seemed justified. His party, Tisza, had won a parliamentary supermajority on the highest turnout since Hungary’s first free election in 1990, ending 16 years of increasingly autocratic rule.
Read the full story, “Hungary’s Long Road Back”, on Jogjajateng.com → Hal ini relevan dalam konteks Global.
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, May 8 (IPS) – When Péter Magyar took the stage in Budapest on the night of 12 April, he told the crowd they had ‘liberated Hungary’. The hyperbole seemed justified. His party, Tisza, had won a parliamentary supermajority on the highest turnout since Hungary’s first free election in 1990, ending 16 years of increasingly autocratic rule.
Read the full story, “Hungary’s Long Road Back”, on Jogjajateng.com → Hal ini relevan dalam konteks Global.
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, May 8 (IPS) – When Péter Magyar took the stage in Budapest on the night of 12 April, he told the crowd they had ‘liberated Hungary’. The hyperbole seemed justified. His party, Tisza, had won a parliamentary supermajority on the highest turnout since Hungary’s first free election in 1990, ending 16 years of increasingly autocratic rule.
Read the full story, “Hungary’s Long Road Back”, on Jogjajateng.com → Hal ini relevan dalam konteks Global.
Redaksi akan mengikuti perkembangan berita ini.