US renews call for Hungary to engage with besieged school

Supporters of Hungary's political opposition display a banner during an anti-government protest, at Budapest University of Technology and Economics in Budapest, Hungary, Sunday, May 21, 2017.? At least 5,000 protesters marched in downtown Budapest, calling on the government to repeal legal amendments which could force Central European University to leave the country. (Balazs Mohai/MTI via AP)

BUDAPEST — The Hungarian government should "engage directly" with a university founded by billionaire George Soros which may have to leave Budapest because of recent amendments to the law on higher education, the United States said yesterday.

State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said the US government urges Hungary to suspend the implementation of the new "discriminatory, onerous requirements" which she said threaten academic freedom and independence.

The Hungarian government did not immediately reply.

"We hope that the government of Hungary is listening," Central European University spokeswoman Colleen Sharkey said.

Some of the new conditions in the law would force CEU to open a US campus and condition the university's stay in Budapest to a bilateral agreement between the United States and Hungary.

Nauert said the US "has no authority or intention" to negotiate about CEU or other universities in Hungary, as sought by Hungarian officials.

The statement by Nauert, named to her post a month ago, was significant because Hungarian officials had dismissed earlier State Department declarations on CEU, saying they came from US diplomats in place before the inauguration of President Donald Trump.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban has said the amendments passed in April seek to put all universities in Hungary on equal footing and eliminate "unfair advantages" enjoyed by CEU, such as its ability to issue diplomas recognized both in Hungary and the US, where it is accredited in New York state.

Nobel Prize winners, the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and dozens of Hungarian and foreign universities have expressed support for CEU, considered Hungary's best university in certain fields. Tens of thousands have attended rallies in Budapest calling on the government to refrain from expelling the university, which enrolls some 1,400 students from over 100 countries.

The CEU issue is part of a wider government campaign against Soros, a Hungarian-American whose "open society" ideals contrast with Orban's plans to make Hungary an "illiberal state" and his radical opposition to migration.

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