E/CN.4/2000/16/Add.1
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III. CONSULTATIONS IN HUNGARY
97.
The Special Rapporteur spent most of his stay in Hungary in Budapest from 27
to 30 September 1999. He met senior officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the
Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of the Interior. He also had talks
with Mr. Gyula K. Szelei and Mrs. Klára Breuer, respectively Director-General for International
Organizations and Chief of the Department of Human Rights and Minorities Legislation at the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Toso Doncsev, President of the National and Ethnic Minorities
Office, Mr. Tamas Ban, Director-General at the Ministry of Justice, and Mr. Zsolt Jékely,
Director-General at the Ministry of Cultural Heritage.
98.
The Special Rapporteur also had talks with parliamentarians, including
Mr. Béla Pokol, Chairperson of the Constitutional Committee of the National Assembly,
and Mrs. Kosa Magda Kosacs, Chairperson of the Committee of the National Assembly for
Human Rights, Minority Rights and Religious Affairs. He had meetings with representatives of
national human rights institutions, including Mr. Jenö Kaltenbach, Parliamentary Commissioner
for the Rights of National and Ethnic Minorities, Mr. Làzló Majtényl, Parliamentary
Commissioner for Data Protection, and Mr. Péter Polt, Deputy Ombudsman. He also met
Mr. Lorenzo Pascuali, Deputy Representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees. Lastly, the Special Rapporteur had talks with representatives of Roma community
associations and organizations for the protection of rights, and the rights of the Roma in
particular. A list of the most important people with whom the Special Rapporteur spoke is
contained in the annex to this report.
99.
The Special Rapporteur would like to thank the Hungarian authorities for their warm
welcome and their cooperation in the preparation and course of this visit. He would also like to
thank the Deputy Representative of the High Commissioner for Refugees and all the associations
and organizations with which he had talks.
A. Overview
100. The changes which have occurred in the political and economic system are part of the
upheaval that affected most of the communist regimes in central and eastern Europe after 1989.
As a result, Hungary opted for a democratic system with institutions to guarantee the rule of law
and human rights and fundamental freedoms, including the protection of the rights of minorities.
Thus, in accordance with article 70 (a), paragraphs 1 and 2, of the Constitution, the State
guarantees the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all persons on Hungarian territory
with no distinction as to race, colour, language, etc. In accordance with paragraph 3 of the same
article, the Republic of Hungary guarantees equality before the law and takes whatever steps are
required to ensure equality of opportunity.
101. Hungary is a party to the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Racial Discrimination, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Since it joined the Council of
Europe in 1990, Hungary has been a party to the European Convention on Human Rights.
In 1995, it ratified the framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities.