BUDAPEST
SEPTEMBER 20 2008 21:53h
Costa Cruises: We are very sorry and deeply saddened
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Protests have become frequent since Gyurcsany admitted in a leaked speech that he lied about the state of the economy to win re-election.
Protesters from the far-right gathered around a downtown monument to the Soviet Red Army, attacked police who guarded the memorial and chanted anti-government and anti-Semitic slogans.
Far-right protests have become frequent since 2006, when Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany admitted in a leaked speech that he lied about the state of the economy to win re-election. His remarks were followed by Hungary's worst violence in decades.
On Saturday, police pushed hundreds of protesters, some of whom wore swastikas, through downtown streets, continuously firing tear gas.
The clashes came just hours after several liberal groups, including the Democratic Charta, founded in part by the Socialist prime minister, and a Roma organisation gathered in Budapest to protest against far right organisations which they said were becoming increasingly powerful and menacing.
Gyurcsany, one of Hungary's most disliked politicians, has struggled to amass popular support after his government enacted hefty tax and price hikes in 2006 to reduce the biggest budget deficit in the 27-nation European Union.
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