This year’s World Congress of Families global summit of social conservatives officially gets under way in Budapest on Friday. Many participants will also be taking part in a “demographic summit” on Thursday, which will be addressed by Hungary’s strongman leader and WCF “hero” Viktor Orbán.

Earlier this week we reported on some of the American figures speaking at this year’s summit, the first global event since the WCF became a project of Brian Brown’s new International Organization for the Family. Today we take a look at some of their allies from around the world, many of whom actively support laws that not only criminalize same-sex sexual conduct but also criminalize advocacy for LGBTQ equality.

A number of the WCF’s scheduled speakers joined Brown in Cape Town, South Africa in December to launch the IOF and its so-called Cape Town Declaration, an anti-LGBTQ manifesto that can be seen as the international counterpart to the U.S. Religious Right’s Manhattan Declaration. Many also attended last year’s WCF summit in Tbilisi, Georgia, at which a major theme was railing against the secular, decadent West, and the 2015 event in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Several Orbán government officials will be speaking, including Katalin Novák, the Secretary of State for Youth, Family and International Affairs, who helped launch the IOF and who heads the local organizing committee for this year’s summit. Also speaking is Zoltan Balog, a cabinet member who heads the Ministry of Human Capacities. Other government officials include Inga Yumasheva from the Russian Duma’s Committee for Families, Women and Children and Toby Okechukwu, a member of the Nigerian parliament.

Here are some of the activists the U.S. Religious Right will be embracing this weekend:

Also participating are a number of religious leaders from Hungary and around the world: