Budapest (Hungary), Oct 23 (AP) Prime Minister Viktor Orban compared Hungary's membership in the European Union to more than four decades of Soviet occupation of his country during a speech on Monday commemorating the anniversary of Hungary's 1956 anti-Soviet revolution.

Speaking to a select group of guests in the city of Veszprem, Orban accused the EU of seeking to strip Hungary of its identity by imposing a model of liberal democracy that he said Hungarians reject.

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Brussels, the de facto capital of the EU, employs methods against Hungary that hearken back to the days of Soviet domination by Moscow, he said.

“Today, things pop up that remind us of the Soviet times. Yes, it happens that history repeats itself,” Orban said at the event, from which all media were excluded except Hungary's state media.

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“Fortunately, what once was tragedy is now a comedy at best. Fortunately, Brussels is not Moscow. Moscow was a tragedy. Brussels is just a bad contemporary parody.”

The October 23 national holiday commemorates the beginning of a 1956 popular uprising against Soviet repression that began in Hugnary's capital, Budapest, and spread across the country.

After Hungary's Stalinist leader was successfully ousted and Soviet troops were forced out of the capital, a directive from Moscow sent the Red Army back into Budapest and brutally suppressed the revolution, killing as many as 3,000 civilians and destroying much of the city.

Orban, a proponent of an alternative form of populist governance that he calls “illiberal democracy,” has long used the holiday to rally his supporters. In recent years, he has used the occasion to draw parallels between the EU's attempts to bring Hungary into compliance with its rules on corruption and democracy, and the repression the country faced under both Soviet occupation in the 20th century.

“We had to dance to the tune that Moscow whistled,” Orban said of Hungary's days in the Eastern Bloc. "Brussels whistles too, but we dance as we want to, and if we don't want to, then we don't dance!”

The holiday, which looms large in Hungary's historical memory as a freedom fight against Russian repression, comes as war rages in neighbouring Ukraine where Moscow has occupied large swaths of the country and illegally annexed four regions.

Orban, widely considered one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's only allies in the EU, has vigorously lobbied against the bloc imposing sanctions on Moscow, though the nationalist leader has ultimately voted for all sanctions packages.

Last week, Orban met with Putin before an international forum in Beijing, a meeting that focused on Hungary's access to Russian energy.

European leaders, as well as other members of the NATO military alliance such as the United States, expressed concern that Orban had met with Putin even as an international arrest warrant has been issued against him for alleged war crimes in Ukraine.

“Hungary never wanted to confront Russia. Hungary always has been eager to expand contacts,” Orban told Putin, according to a Russian translation of his remarks broadcast on Russian state television.

On Monday, Orban said that while the Soviet Union had been “hopeless”, he believed that governance in the EU could be reformed through an European Parliament election scheduled for June 2024.

“Moscow was irreparable, but Brussels and the European Union can still be fixed,” he said. (AP)

(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)