"you don't have to go all the way to China to find oppressed minorities!"

As we reported this morning, the spokesperson of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Wang Wenbin, reacted yesterday to the Budapest street renaming. He said that this behavior is shameless and the action only hinders Chinese-Hungarian relations.

It is likely that the notice was not read by Albert Mengyán, a medical student from the Southern Region, who offered Gergely Karácsony two scarves in response to the mayor's white scarf symbolizing minorities oppressed by China, which he wore as a protest against Fudan University, saying: "you don't have to go all the way to China to find oppressed minorities!”

On his personal blog edited on Facebook, Mengyán usually speaks on behalf of Hungarians living across the border. Now seeing the mayor's enthusiasm, how much he likes to stand up for oppressed minorities, Mengyán offered a scarf from Dunaszerdahely, on behalf of Hungarians in the highlands, and one from Topolya in the south.

In his post, Albert Mengyán stated: "we call on all actors in the political life of the motherland to make the issue of Hungarians living abroad a national minimum!"

Harmful scenery activity instead of city management:

The mayor and candidate for prime minister, together with Krisztina Baranyi, IX. worked out with the district mayor that they could rename the streets around the Fudan university under construction.

There is basically no problem with the names themselves, as the case of the Dalai Lama and the Uyghur martyrs appear from time to time as a determining factor in the columns of the world press. At the same time, the location and the timing, of course, serve no other purpose than to destroy the diplomatic relationship built with China and nurtured with extreme sensitivity.

Source:

Featured image: 9tv (screenshot)