Fruzsina Skrabski and the index left-wing journalist Tamás Bodoky in their documentary entitled Victims 2006 not only show the shocking images of the 2006 police terror in Gyurcsány while the victims talk about the cruel tortures they had to go through, but the film also provides a kind of explanation for what at first glance seems reasonable seems incomprehensible to reason.
If a prime minister lies, swears and loses his self-control amid obscenities, and also admits that he has pushed a country to the brink of the abyss through bad economic policy decisions, then people take to the streets. Under democratic conditions, it looks like the pretenders read their demands on public television. However, if the government is unable to think along democratic values, it does not allow this, then it starts to cut corners.
It is part of the natural history of dictatorships that if someone does not say what the authorities want, they will beat their kidneys. We saw this live in 2006, during the prime ministership of Ferenc Gyurcsány. And this can be seen in the latest documentary by Fruzsina Skrabski and the index left-wing journalist Tamás Bodoky. The person's stomach turns first. Then he slowly can't bear to look at the canvas, because the pain drips from him like blood. The feeling of pain is quickly taken over by anger, and the most important of the questions is: how could all this happen?
How is it possible that 190-centimeter-tall policemen drag girls walking peacefully by their hair while blood pours from their heads. How is it possible that they are kept captive for five days with bloody heads? How is it possible that after they are freed, they are not satisfied? The culprits are not found, the justice system - as it is said in the film - will cease to exist in our country in October 2006.
But the armed policemen were brave not only against the girls, but against everyone who came across them at that time. People lying on the ground with their hands tied behind their backs were beaten until their bones were broken. It is said in the documentary: this was the concept.
You couldn't get out of the hands of the police without a broken bone these days. Lawyers from human rights organizations financed by György Soros also speak in the film, who also talk about the immeasurable amount of violations that have occurred these days.
In the film by Fruzsina Skrabski and Tamás Bodoky, left-wing and right-wing thinkers both talk about the fact that this cannot happen in a European democratic country. But then how could all this happen? The viewer did not understand anything for a long time. Until the film provides a logical answer.
It is conceivable that everything was part of a concept. On the one hand, it was probably not possible to read the petition of the peaceful demonstrators on television, so that the crowd would get angry and storm the TV headquarters.
On the other hand, they probably didn't send any help to the not too many policemen protecting the TV headquarters because they had to become victims. Moreover, probably so that it is not about what horrors the prime minister confessed about himself and his government (after which every prime minister in the world would have immediately submitted his resignation and proposed calling new elections in a similar situation), but about hurting the demonstrators the poor and trembling policemen like poplar leaves. (In other words – and this is also very important information – the police probably also fell victim to the manipulation of power.)
So that police revenge and brutality can be accepted by the people, so that the violence against peaceful demonstrators can be explained. However, there was probably a mistake in the machine, because it was not police violence against seemingly peaceful people (which would have been outrageous in itself), but beating people to death. Eyes gouging out, bones broken, heads smashed in, girls' hair pulled out. But maybe that was the concept.
That fear reigns in the country again, like in the fifties. That anyone who dares to speak out against the government will have their eyesight endangered, their bones broken, they will not have a peaceful night even for decades because of their nightmares, they will only suffer from panic disorder if they don't commit suicide right away.
Source: Hungarian Nation