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00:00It's a rallying cry against what Hungarians say is a rollback of rights.
00:04The streets of Budapest flooded with tens of thousands taking part in the Pride March on Saturday,
00:09defying a ban by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's government.
00:14This year, the situation got so toxic in Hungary, including in Budapest,
00:20that now we need to make our voices heard a little more loudly, I think.
00:25This is about much more than just homosexuality, about equal LGBTQ plus rights of course,
00:34but more than that, this is our last moment to stand up for our rights.
00:39The event comes after Orbán's ruling coalition amended laws and the constitution earlier this year
00:45to ban the annual celebration, citing a widely criticised need to protect children.
00:50The move caused outrage in Hungary and beyond,
00:53turning the Pride March into a broader resistance
00:55against what critics say is the EU member states' increasingly weakening democratic institutions.
01:01And it's not just supporters and campaigners of LGBTQ rights that are out in full force.
01:06More than 70 MEPs are also marching for the right to freedom of assembly.
01:10If a Pride March is prohibited, that's illegal.
01:14Not that Pride is illegal, prohibiting is illegal.
01:17And I think it's important for everyone in Europe to stand up for our joint freedoms and liberties and our core values.
01:26Organisers face up to a year in prison and attendees a ban of up to 500 euros.
01:31Nearly 50 organisations from across Europe have urged EU officials to launch an infringement procedure against Hungary,
01:38citing the government's intention to use facial recognition to identify attendees,
01:41a move that would be a violation of the EU's recently adopted artificial intelligence.

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