Sun, Nov 22 2009

Twenty years on, still no joy

Fri, Oct 30 2009 17:05 CET 1113 Views 1 Comment
Twenty years on, still no joy

Hungary's prime minister Gordon Bajnai

The vast majority of the Hungarian public believe that the 1989 change of regime was necessary but many consider both the country and themselves losers in the new system, an Ipsos poll released on the 20-year anniversary of the fall of communism found.

Every second person said they or their families have lost out from the regime change, while only 14 per cent consider themselves as having gained from establishment of the new system. The remaining one-third of Hungarians do not feel that the introduction of democracy and capitalism has had any effect on their lives.

Read more at the Budapest Times 

Comments

Anonymous Vanko Mon, Nov 02 2009 11:13 CET
Inappropriate comment?

The 14% were all linked to the old communist corrupt system. They always win. All major companies etc are now owned by "ex" communists. No chance for ordinary folk

Write comment

Name:Comment:

Generate new code
Send your comment

More in this category

White tigress slaughtered by lions

The white tigress is a rare animal resulting from a special recessive gene

Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine to form military brigade

The agreement was signed in Brussels earlier this week but it's still a long way off before the Polish-Lithuanian-Ukrainian brigade can be formalized as an international agreement.

Flu slows down Kyiv

Affected by quarantine and panic, life in Kyiv has been subdued in the past few weeks.

Poll: Number of Russians worrying about A(H1N1) growing

The number of Russians worrying about contracting the A(H1N1) flu virus grew to 70 per cent in November from 57 per cent in September.

Riots break out in central Athens on 36th anniversary of the Polytechnic massacre

The Polytechnic University or Politechniu in Greek, was the scene of a massacre in 1973, when Greek army tanks broke into the University and shot students indiscriminately, killing dozens of youths.