HomeAdvocacy GroupsHungarian NGO protests role of Putin's former interpreter in OSCE election mission

Hungarian NGO protests role of Putin’s former interpreter in OSCE election mission

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BUDAPEST, March 20 (Reuters) - A Hungarian ‌civil rights group has raised concerns over the role of ​Russian President Vladimir Putin's former interpreter in a mission to monitor what is likely to be Prime ⁠Minister Viktor Orban's toughest election fight since he took power in 2010.

Opinion polls show the nationalist Orban, who has fostered warm ties with Putin despite the Ukraine war, ​trailing his centre-right opponent ahead of the April 12 vote. His defeat would have big implications ‌for Europe amid the rise of far-right parties.

The Hungarian Helsinki Committee (HHC) this month sent a letter to the leadership of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, calling for ⁠the removal of Daria Boyarskaya from its election observer mission.

"The HHC ⁠requested that Putin's former interpreter be relieved of her duties related to the Hungarian elections to ensure an atmosphere of trust and confidentiality," the group wrote on its website.

Boyarskaya, a senior adviser at the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (PA), "assists with preparations and undertakes official visits ‌by OSCE PA officials and supports election observation missions", according to the organization's website.

She ⁠previously worked at Russia's Foreign Ministry.

HHC co-chair Marta Pardavi said ‌her group had received a response from OSCE PA ​Secretary General Roberto Montella expressing confidence in Boyarskaya. 

"I was disappointed by the secretary general's letter as I felt he does not fully hear the concerns that I express," ‌Pardavi told Reuters.

Montella and a spokesperson for OSCE PA did ​not immediately reply to a request ⁠for comment. 

SANCTIONED BY POLAND

In 2022 Poland placed Boyarskaya on its sanctions list, ‌barring her from entering the country.

Poland's interior ⁠ministry said at the time that her backing for Putin's government "creates a serious risk of provocation or incidents that would damage Poland's international position".

The Vienna-based OSCE is a 57-nation ​body comprising former Cold War ‌foes the U.S. and Russia as well as most countries in Europe, Central Asia and North ⁠America. It is designed to prevent and ​monitor conflicts in Europe. 

(Reporting by Anita Komuves in Budapest, additional reporting by Barbara ​Erling in WarsawEditing by Gareth Jones)

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