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    HomeEmergencyHungary opposition condemns Fidesz election video with fictitious execution scene

    Hungary opposition condemns Fidesz election video with fictitious execution scene

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    BUDAPEST, Feb 19 (Reuters) - Hungarian opposition ‌leader Peter Magyar protested on Thursday after Prime Minister Viktor Orban's ​ruling Fidesz party aired an emotive campaign video showing a little girl weeping at a window, intercut with scenes ⁠of her father being executed in war.

    Orban has cast a parliamentary election on April 12 as a choice between "war and peace", asserting that Magyar's centre-right Tisza party would, at the behest ​of the European Union, drag Hungary into Ukraine's war against Russian invasion.

    Tisza has said it wants peace and ‌would not send any weapons or troops to Ukraine.

    The 33-second video, published on the Facebook page of Fidesz's Budapest branch, depicts a kneeling, blindfolded soldier in Hungarian uniform being shot on a rain-drenched battlefield. ⁠A caption reads, in part: "This is only a nightmare now, but Brussels ⁠is preparing to make it a reality ... Let's not take risks. Fidesz is the safe choice!"

    In a statement, Magyar called the video "sickening, unforgivable and deeply outrageous". "This is not politics, this is soulless manipulation," he said.

    At a briefing, Orban's chief of staff said more than a thousand people were ‌killed or seriously injured in Ukraine's war every day.

    "What we see is the reality of ⁠the war," Gergely Gulyas said.

    He did not deny that the video ‌had been made using artificial intelligence, which allows complex, lifelike ​scenes to be generated on demand, without a film set or actors.

    In October, Magyar filed a criminal complaint accusing one of Orban's key political aides of using deepfake technology to impersonate ‌him, without acknowledgment, and damage him in another campaign video.

    Fidesz ​has used AI-generated election videos repeatedly in ⁠recent months, some labelled as such, some not. The European Union's forthcoming ‌AI Act will make such disclosures compulsory.

    Reuters confirmed that ⁠the war video had been made with the help of Google's AI models.

    A survey published on Thursday by the 21 Research Centre indicated that 23% of voters believe Tisza would lead ​Hungary into the Ukraine war if ‌elected. 

    While 57% of Fidesz voters answered 'yes', among Tisza's supporters the percentage was statistically zero.

    Tisza has an ⁠8-12 point lead over Orban's Fidesz in most ​polls, though pollsters close to the government still say the governing party is ahead.

    (Reporting ​by Anita Komuves; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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