A month after they hit the streets, people in Hungary are back in protest mode.
This time, the issue is corruption involving senior officials in the government after a former government insider turned critic released an audio recording that he says proves that top officials conspired to cover up corruption.
February saw Hungary’s largest protests in years when it was revealed that the president had pardoned a man jailed for covering up child sexual abuses by the director of a state-run orphanage.
Close allies of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, including the president and Justice Minister Judit Varga, were forced to resign due to public outrage.
The latest allegations come from Varga’s ex-husband, Peter Magyar, a former political insider who says he has turned whistleblower to reveal the extent of impropriety within Orbán’s government.
He has posted a recording on Facebook and YouTube featuring what appeared to be Varga’s voice describing how other government officials caused evidence to be removed from court records to cover up their roles in corrupt business dealings.
“They suggested to the prosecutors what should be removed,” Varga says in the recording, which Magyar says he made during a conversation in the former couple’s apartment.
Varga also says that one of her state secretaries was tipped off by senior officials that he was the subject of a corruption investigation.
Magyar has given the recording to the Metropolitan Public Prosecutor’s Office in Budapest to be used as evidence.
In a Facebook post, Varga accused Magyar of domestic violence during their marriage and claimed she had made the statements under duress, but didn’t deny that it was her in the recording.
“I said what he wanted to hear so I could get away as soon as possible. In a situation like this, any person can say things they don’t mean in a state of intimidation,” Varga wrote.
Magyar later denied those claims in a separate post on Facebook.
Once a senior but little-known member of Orbán’s political circle, Magyar shot to prominence when he gave an interview in February to popular YouTube channel Partizan in which he accused Orbán’s government of widespread corruption and of using smear campaigns to discredit its opponents.
Earlier this month, he addressed a crowd of tens of thousands in Budapest and announced plans to form a new political party to challenge the governing party’s 14-year grip on power as an alternative to fragmented opposition in Hungary.
The scandal caused an unprecedented political crisis within Orbán’s government, which has led Hungary since 2010. Magyar’s followers hope his position as a former insider can help disrupt the political system in Hungary, which many see as a deeply entrenched autocracy.
In his recent public appearances, Magyar has particularly targeted Antal Rogan, a close Orbán ally who is responsible for the government’s communications as well as the country’s secret services. The recording released purports to show that Rogan led the effort to alter evidence.
The government has dismissed Magyar as an opportunist seeking to forge a new career after his divorce with Varga and his loss of positions in several state companies. But his rise has compounded political headaches for Orbán that have included the resignation of members of his government and a painful economic crisis.
After spending nearly four hours inside the prosecutor’s office on Tuesday, Magyar told journalists that the alleged evidence tampering was cause for Orbán’s government to step down, and called for a spontaneous protest later in the day.
Thousands of demonstrators gathered at Magyar’s urging at the Public Prosecutor’s Office in Budapest where he demanded the resignation of the attorney general, whom he accused of acting in the interests of Orbán’s party.
“Let us send a message from here, together, that we will not let them cover up the biggest legal and political scandal of the last 30 years! We will not allow it!” he said, adding that he demanded that the alleged misconduct “be investigated independently, objectively and free from political interference.”
With inputs from AP