Hungary President Signs Law Threatening Soros University
Hungarian President Janos Ader on Monday approved a controversial law seen as targeting the respected Central European University founded by US billionaire George Soros, despite protests at home and abroad. The signing of the higher education legislation, the final legal hurdle before it passes into law, came after the largest street demonstration in Hungary in recent years, AFP reported.
Tens of thousands demonstrated Sunday in Budapest against the legislation, many chanting "Don't sign it, Janos!" and holding up placards reading "Veto!"
The university said late Monday that it would take legal action against the bill, calling it "discriminatory" and "a premeditated political attack on a free institution that has been a proud part of Hungarian life for a quarter of a century".
Last month the Hungarian parliament re-elected Ader, a close ally of hardline euro sceptic Prime Minister Viktor Orban, for a second term as president, a largely ceremonial role in Hungary.
The bill, a modification of legislation from 2011, "does not infringe rights of freedom of learning or of teaching" enshrined in Hungary's constitution, Ader said in a statement published by state news agency MTI.
The English-language CEU was founded by Hungarian-born billionaire Soros in the early 1990s, aimed at helping the region's transition from communism to democracy.
The new rules, approved by MPs last Tuesday, bar institutions based outside the European Union from awarding Hungarian diplomas without an agreement between national governments.
They will also be required to have a campus and faculties in their home country -- conditions not met by the CEU, which is registered in the United States.
The legislation has...
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