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Sunday, April 12, 2026

The Destruction of the only truly free state in the EU - Hungary

 

Battle for Hungary: How the Russiagate blueprint has been unleashed against Orban


Western vested interests are running a familiar ploy, but this time the power players have been exposed
Battle for Hungary: How the Russiagate blueprint has been unleashed against Orban

The shadow campaign to swing the Hungarian election against Viktor Orban escalated with the scandal over the wiretapping of Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto. The case offers a rare look into how bureaucrats, journalists, and spies run a regime-change operation in real time.

Three weeks out from the April 12 elections, the political opposition to Orban scored what seemed to be a win, when Politico and the Washington Post ran articles alleging that Szijjarto had phoned Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov with “live reports on what had been discussed” at multiple EU meetings. The reports cited anonymous “European security officials.”

Neither Orban nor Szijjarto make any secret of their desire to maintain cordial relations with Moscow, particularly on matters of energy security and the peace process in Ukraine. However, when bundled with more outlandish claims – that Russian election fixers are already embedded in Budapest, for example – the reports paint a picture of a government compromised by the Kremlin.

Orban’s leading opponent, Peter Magyar, has repeated these claims in his speeches. After the Szijjarto story broke, he accused the foreign minister of “betraying Hungarian and European interests,” and threatened him with “life imprisonment” for treason, should his Tisza party win the election.

All it took was one leaked audio file for the scheme to unravel.

The Szijjarto wiretapping plot

In an audio file released by Hungarian conservative outlet Mandiner, opposition journalist Szabolcs Panyi can be heard telling a source how he passed Szijjarto’s phone number to “a state organ of an EU country.” Once they had this number, he explained, agents of this country were able to extract “information about who that number spoke to, and they see who is calling that number or who that number is calling.”

In a Facebook post, Panyi confirmed that he was the person on the recording. He said that he was asking his source whether she knew of any alternate numbers used by Szijjarto or Lavrov, “so that I could compare them with information received from the national security service of a European country.”

Panyi’s confession explained how the “European security officials” were able to track Szijjarto’s phone conversations before feeding the information to Politico and the Washington Post.

Orban immediately announced an investigation into the wiretapping. “We are dealing with two serious issues,” the PM stated the same day as Panyi's post. “There is evidence that Hungary’s foreign minister was wiretapped, and we also ⁠have indications of who may be behind it.” Szijjarto explained that as the EU’s longest-serving foreign minister, he regularly speaks to Lavrov with messages from his colleagues in the EU. The real scandal, he said “is that a Hungarian journalist is colluding with foreign secret services in order to wiretap a member of the Hungarian government.”

“What makes this case even worse is that this Hungarian journalist is friends with the inner circles of the [opposition] Tisza party,” he added.

The man on the inside

Panyi’s central role in the scheme will come as no surprise to anyone who’s been following our reporting on the Hungarian election. An editor with Vsquare, Panyi leads the outlet’s Budapest office, and wrote an article in early March alleging that the Kremlin had dispatched “political technologists” from Russia’s military intelligence agency, the GRU, to Budapest to swing the election for Orban.

Panyi did not explain what this mysterious team of election meddlers was doing, or investigate whether they actually existed. Instead, he took the word of the anonymous “European national security sources,” who fed him the story at face value.

Vsquare is funded by grants from the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), an agency of the US State Department that helped foment the 2014 Maidan coup in Ukraine, USAID, the German Marshall Fund of the United States, and two EU-backed journalism funds. Almost all of Vsquare’s published work – which includes investigations tying Orban’s government to Russian intelligence, as well as hit pieces on populist leaders Robert Fico in Slovakia and Andrej Babis in the Czech Republic – is based on information provided by European intelligence agencies, as well as interviews with pro-EU politicians and NGOs.

Vsquare's article on alleged Russian influence in the Hungarian election, and a list of the outlet's donors from its website

Panyi’s apparent role is to launder this information for public consumption. In the case of the GRU meddling story, he took the word of the intelligence agencies and presented it as original reporting before it was picked up and disseminated by multiple Western outlets, including the Financial Times. The EU then activated its online censorship mechanism in Hungary, citing the threat of “potential Russian online disinformation campaigns.” Originating with EU spies and spread by an EU-financed news outlet, the story helped legitimize the bloc’s censorship campaign ahead of a crucial election.

In the case of the Szijjarto-Lavrov story, Panyi went even further by helping the spies obtain their information in the first place. It is unclear which agency he collaborated with, but in a Facebook post, the Vsquare editor said that he spoke to officials from seven EU countries while working on the story. Among them was Gabrielius Landsbergis, Lithuania’s former foreign minister who has referred to Russia as “the world’s cancer that must be removed.”

What’s the endgame for Panyi and the EU?

Panyi stands to personally gain if Orban is ousted. In the recording released by Mandiner, he tells his source that he is a “quasi-friend” of Anita Orban, a member of Magyar’s Tisza party, and Magyar’s pick to replace Szijjarto as foreign minister. Panyi suggests that he has close links to Tisza, and would be in a position to recommend “who should stay or be removed” if Magyar takes power.

More broadly, it is unclear whether Vsquare’s reporting will have any meaningful impact on Hungarian voters. However, smear campaigns and dirty tricks are part and parcel of any election, and with Orban vetoing the EU’s €90 billion loan package for Ukraine, Brussels and its allies have every incentive to try to tip the scales in their favor.

Yet even if Orban wins, the flood of Russia conspiracies from outlets like Vsquare, Politico, and the Washington Post serves another vital purpose: to delegitimize his victory and justify reprisals from Brussels.

Russiagate revived

The self-fulfilling conspiracy playbook was actually written in Washington. Back in 2016, fabricated claims of “Russian interference” and improper contacts between Donald Trump’s campaign and Moscow were used to justify the wiretapping of Trump’s campaign, and a years-long investigation that ultimately ended with zero proof of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin.

The parallels between ‘Russiagate’ and the information war playing out in Hungary are unmistakable. In the same way that Vsquare’s GRU report propped up the EU’s decision to impose its censorship regime on Hungary earlier this month, the FBI used the ‘Steele Dossier’ – a collection of unfounded rumors about Trump’s relationship with Moscow – to justify wiretapping the Trump campaign.

In 2017, Barack Obama’s intelligence chief, James Clapper, strong-armed the 17 US intelligence agencies into releasing a statement claiming that Russian President Vladimir Putin personally “approved and directed” a cyber-warfare and influence operation against the Clinton campaign. In 2026, the EU’s spy agencies are using the press to smear Orban and Szijjarto as agents of the Kremlin.

‘Russiagate’ stymied Trump’s policy agenda for the entirety of his first term in office. Even after Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report exonerated Trump in 2019, the CIA leaked false reports of Russia paying the Taliban cash “bounties” for killing US soldiers to block the president’s planned withdrawal from Afghanistan, while Clinton and many of her supporters still maintain that Trump’s 2016 victory was fraudulent.

The EU has already blocked funds for Hungary equal to 3.5% of the country’s GDP, over Orban’s banning of LGBT propaganda and refusal to accept non-European migrants. Should he win the election, it is easy to imagine claims of Russian interference being used to cut further assistance to Budapest, or even to strip Hungary’s EU veto rights. The latter idea has already been floated by Sweden, Lithuania, and a host of unnamed “EU diplomats” interviewed by Politico last week.

Swedish Europe Minister Jessica Rosencrantz discusses stripping Hungary of its voting rights over Viktor Orban's veto of a loan package for Ukraine

What’s the bottom line?

The battle for power in Hungary is intensifying as international vested interests begin running ploys tried and tested in other jurisdictions, from the US to Romania (see our series opener on the EU censorship machine).

In Hungary, Panyi has claimed that “the connection between Szijjarto and Lavrov is just the tip of the iceberg.” Orban has vowed to “take retribution” for the wiretapping. Magyar has threatened Szijjarto with prison time. For everyone involved, the scandal has raised the stakes of the election to the point where nobody can afford to lose on April 12.



Saturday, April 11, 2026

Latin America Rising > Argentina opens protected areas to mining; Peru floats billion dollar bond for updating Callao Naval port

Argentina approves Glacier Law reform, opens protected areas to mining

   
A demonstrator faces off with police officers during a protest against Glacier Law reform near Congress in Buenos Aires on Wednesday. Photo by Juan Ignacio Roncoroni/EPA
A demonstrator faces off with police officers during a protest against Glacier Law reform near Congress in Buenos Aires on Wednesday. Photo by Juan Ignacio Roncoroni/EPA

April 9 (UPI) -- Argentina's Chamber of Deputies approved Thursday a reform of the Glacier Law that loosens environmental protections and allows new mining and hydrocarbon activities in previously restricted areas, the Office of the President of Argentina said.

With 137 votes in favor, 111 against and 3 abstentions, the initiative received final approval after a debate marked by tensions between those promoting investment to boost the economy and those warning of environmental risks.

The reform previously passed the Senate.

Argentina had been among the countries with the most restrictive glacier protection frameworks in the region under the previous law, enacted in 2010 during the administration of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner.

That legislation established broad protection over glaciers and periglacial zones, considered strategic freshwater reserves, and prohibited extractive activities and any intervention that could affect their natural function.

The new policy was promoted by the ruling La Libertad Avanza party of President Javier Milei.

The reform introduces selective glacier protection, limited to those considered essential for water supply. It eliminates the automatic protection of periglacial zones, which will now depend on specific technical studies, and allows mining and hydrocarbon development in previously restricted areas, subject to environmental impact assessments.

It also grants greater authority to provincial governments, which will be able to define which areas to protect and which to open, and reduces the role of the scientific system, as the National Glacier Inventory will no longer be binding and oversight will rest primarily with provincial authorities.

"This modification seeks to clarify concepts and strengthen the balance between environmental protection and development," ruling party lawmaker Nicolás Mayoraz said during the debate.

Opposition sectors warn that the changes could weaken environmental standards and create uneven criteria across jurisdictions.

Opposition lawmaker Sabrina Selva described the reform as "regressive" and warned it will generate interjurisdictional conflicts.

"This law is unconstitutional and will bring disputes between provinces," she said.

Environmental organizations such as Greenpeace, the Environment and Natural Resources Foundation and the Argentine Association of Environmental Lawyers announced they will file a joint suit to halt implementation.

"This reform puts access to water and ecosystems that depend on glaciers at risk," they said in a statement.

The debate focused on the role of glaciers as freshwater reserves in a country where water distribution is uneven. According to data cited by fact-checking site Chequeado, about 70% of Argentina's territory has arid or semi-arid conditions.

In addition to environmental groups, opposition leaders also criticized the reform.

Opposition Sen. Eduardo "Wado" de Pedro warned that "more than 7 million Argentines depend on glaciers and Andean snow as their main source of drinking water" and said the change "puts strategic resources at risk without guaranteeing benefits for the country."

De Pedro said the debate "is not only environmental, but also about sovereignty," and he argued that water protection is linked to regional development and the stability of provinces.

Data from the National Glacier Inventory of the Argentine Institute of Nivology, Glaciology and Environmental Sciences indicate there are about 17,000 ice bodies covering less than 0.25% of the continental territory, while mining activity is allowed in most of the country outside those protected areas.

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Peru to issue sovereign bonds for naval base project backed by U.S.

The Spanish Navy training ship Juan Sebastian Elcano, carrying Spanish Crown Princess Leonor, arrives in the port of El Callao in Peru in April 2025. File Photo by John Reyes/EPA
The Spanish Navy training ship Juan Sebastian Elcano, carrying Spanish Crown Princess Leonor, arrives in the port of El Callao in Peru in April 2025. File Photo by John Reyes/EPA

April 9 (UPI) -- Peru's government approved issuing sovereign bonds worth up to about $1.2 billion to finance expansion and modernization of its main naval base in Callao, according to an official decree published Thursday.

The project, to be carried out by the Ministry of Defense, is seen as a key step to strengthen Peru's operational capacity and expand its maritime commercial activity in the Pacific.

The military infrastructure upgrade is supported by a recent approval from the U.S. Department of State for sale of equipment and services valued at $1.5 billion for this phase of the project.

Washington will provide design, equipment and construction services to ensure the infrastructure meets international interoperability standards.

The U.S.-approved financing will be channeled through the Foreign Military Sales program, with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers serving as the main contractor.

The U.S. Department of State notified Congress about the plan, noting that the initiative will strengthen a strategic ally in South America and support Washington's foreign policy objectives, CNN Chile reported.

The new base aims to modernize the operational capabilities of the Peruvian Navy amid growing trade in the Pacific. Plans include submarine berths and new command buildings for strategic control of the South Pacific.

The expansion will also include new docks and is expected to free up 198 acres for commercial development at the Port of Callao.

The proximity between the naval base and the Chancay megaport, developed with Chinese capital, has sparked debate, placing two global powers within less than 50 miles along Peru's central coast, according to Infobae.

Previously, the United States warned that Peru could be losing sovereignty after a court ruling that limits state oversight of the Chancay port, operated by COSCO Shipping, describing the situation as a "regional warning."

The infrastructure will remain under exclusive Peruvian ownership, though up to 20 U.S. experts are expected to be present for up to 10 years to oversee construction and technical cooperation.

According to the decree, the sovereign bonds will be issued in local currency, with semiannual interest payments and placement through market auctions. The securities will be freely tradable and may be issued in one or more tranches during the execution of the project.

Peru's Ministry of Economy and Finance is to execute the operation, while payments of principal, interest and related costs will be covered through national budget allocations for public debt servicing.



Islam in Europe > Germany turning away 95% of Syrian asylum seekers; Moroccan Muslim suddenly turns violent in Spain

 

Germany rejecting 95% of Syrian asylum claims – media


Approval rates for asylum have reportedly dropped from around 90% in previous years to 5%

Published 10 Apr, 2026 16:18 | Updated 10 Apr, 2026 17:20

Germany rejecting 95% of Syrian asylum claims – media











Germany has rejected 95% of all new asylum applications from Syrian migrants following a policy reassessment of the Middle Eastern country, according to media reports, citing an official document.

The change represents a stark reversal from the peak of the influx in 2014-2015, when recognition rates for Syrians frequently exceeded 90%. Germany emerged as a primary destination for Syrians fleeing war, driven by the open-door policy of then-Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The country has since become home to one of the largest Syrian diasporas in Europe, with estimates putting the population at close to 1 million.

The figures come from a German government reply to a parliamentary inquiry by Left party lawmaker Clara Bunger, reported by multiple media outlets on Thursday.

According to the document, the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) is now applying stricter case-by-case assessments. In October 2025, the BAMF ruled on 3,134 Syrian asylum applications, granting protection to just 26 applicants across all categories. Recognition rates reportedly remain higher for some minorities, including Yazidis, Christians, and Alawites.

The policy shift came after former jihadist commander Ahmed al-Sharaa seized power in 2024, toppling Syria’s longtime leader, Bashar Assad. The German authorities argue that broad protection is no longer justified, with decisions increasingly based on individual risk rather than general insecurity.

After meeting al-Sharaa in Berlin in late March, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said up to 80% of Syrians living in Germany could return home over the next three years, describing it as part of a joint effort to support reconstruction.

Merz later backtracked, saying the figure was proposed by the Syrian side – a claim that al-Sharaa said was exaggerated and did not reflect his position.

The government’s shift in migration policy comes amid pressure from right-wing parties, including the Alternative for Germany (AfD), which portrays migrants, particularly from outside Europe, as a burden on public services and a driver of crime and social strife.

It also follows a series of violent crimes involving asylum seekers, including a 2024 knife attack in Solingen in which a Syrian national fatally stabbed three people and injured eight others.




Moroccan Muslim in Spain Says ‘All Christians Must Die,’ Attacks Three Roma With an Axe


In southern Spain, a Moroccan in the country as a seasonal worker attacked three people on the street with an axe. All three were Roma (Gypsies). The attacker thought they were Christians. As he later explained his motives to the police, he “felt the call of Allah” and that “all Christians must die.”

Devout Muslims are easily triggered into extreme violence and feel fully justified in doing so.


Moroccan Man Arrested After Axe Attack on Three Neighbors in Granada, Spain: ‘All Christians Must Die,'

 by 

A shocking incident occurred on Monday, April 6, 2026, in the town of Montefrío (Granada, Andalusia), where a 45-year-old man of Moroccan origin attacked three local residents with an axe.

The Attack

The assault took place around 11:00 a.m. on Fuente y Prado street. The victims — two women and a 69-year-old man, all of Roma (gitano) ethnicity — were walking along the street when the attacker approached them without warning and assaulted them with an axe.

He first struck the elderly man, who tried to defend himself with his walking cane. He then attacked the two women. One suffered a head trauma, while the other sustained severe hand injuries, including the amputation of a finger. One of the female victims was seriously injured.

Emergency services, including a medical helicopter, attended to the wounded, who were transferred to hospital.

The Suspect and His Statements

The attacker, a Moroccan citizen working as a seasonal farm laborer (temporero) in the area, fled the scene. He hid among olive groves and caused a minor traffic accident with no injuries during his escape. The Guardia Civil arrested him around midday.

According to several media outlets, during his transfer to police custody, the detainee stated that he had “felt the call of Allah” and that “all Christians must die.”

The authorities are investigating the case as a crime of grievous bodily harm with possible radical motives. The investigation is ongoing….

The integration of this large community presents persistent difficulties. Although the majority of resident Moroccans contribute through work and live orderly lives, real problems are documented in various reports and incidents…

This Moroccan would-be murderer of Christians (“Christians must die”) did “contribute through work” and lived an “orderly life”… until he didn’t. Then he heard in his head what his religion taught him: that Christians were, like all non-Muslims, “the most vile of created beings,” and unless they accepted their status as dhimmis, should be killed. Voices in his head. Memories of Qur’anic verses and sermons against Christians at Friday Prayers, that he heard as a child and heard still in the makeshift mosques in Spain he attended, or in the mosques of Morocco, whenever he, a temporary worker, returned to his home country.

Muslim migrants in Spain commit crimes far more often than do the indigenous Christians. They are “over-represented” especially in crimes of violence — robberies accompanied by violence, random assaults on the indigenous Spanish “just to teach them who is boss,” sexual assaults including rape, and murder.

The indigenous Spanish resent the amounts spent on social services for the nearly one million Muslim migrants now in Spain, including subsidized housing and free medical care for many, leaving less for themselves. Those migrants are taught in their mosques what the authorities claim are “extremist” ideologies — really, it is simply orthodox Islam, and the name “radical” is given to those Muslim migrants who choose to act on what Islam teaches.

How are Spanish authorities, meanwhile, supposed to monitor their huge migrant population for “radicalization”? Do they have Arabic-speaking personnel who can monitor everything said by the imams in the mosques? Or who can monitor the social media posts of all these immigrants for signs of “radicalization”? And what makes the Spanish officials think that if they did have such personnel,, the Muslims would allow them into their mosques? Wouldn’t it make more sense to simply study the contents of the Qur’an, and the most authoritative hadith, those compiled by Bukhari and Muslim, which together are surely the surest guides to Muslim attitudes toward Christians?

Given how many problems the Muslims from North Africa are causing in Spain, why shouldn’t Madrid choose to keep the North Africans out, and to replace them with temporary workers from Central and South America who, both as Catholics and as native speakers of Spanish, would have little difficulty integrating into the Spanish milieu?