The Hungarian parliament passed the controversial "Stop Soros" bill on Wednesday, despite calls from the Council of Europe to wait until its team of experts had submitted a review of the bill.

The "Stop Soros" legislation makes it illegal for people or organizations to provide help to illegal immigrants and allows criminal penalties of up to a year in jail for those convicted.

The law is part of Prime Minister Viktor Orban's push against EU migration policies and is named after Hungarian-American financier George Soros, a foe of Orban's government.

Hungary accuses Soros of backing mass migration to Europe and providing support to civic groups that give legal aid to asylum-seekers and refugees.

The parliament, where Orban's right-wing Fidesz party has a two-thirds majority, voted 160-18 to pass the law.

The law applies to "the promotion of illegal immigration" and would criminalize acts such as distributing informational leaflets or

organizing "border observation." The legislation grants the interior minister the power to ban non-governmental organizations that support migration and are deemed as a national security risk.

"The Stop Soros bill and the constitutional amendment vindicate the will of the Hungarian people, entailing a new, strong protection

for the country against illegal migration," Orban's office said after the votes.

In a swipe at the EU over its plans to distribute asylum seekers around the bloc, the parliament also passed on Wednesday a constitutional amendment to state that an "alien population" cannot be settled in Hungary.

Read more:George Soros — selfless philanthropist or liberal demagogue?

The Venice Commission review

The Council of Europe's advisory body on constitutional matters, the Venice Commission, was reviewing the legislation and its opinion on the bill was due on Friday.

Commission chief Gianni Buquicchio had asked Hungary to wait until the Commission published its recommendations or at least to take the Commission's preliminary views, which already been shared with Hungarian officials, into account.

The Council of Europe and the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), have criticised Hungary's new law as "arbitrary" and vague and said it contravenes European law.

Amnesty International called the new laws "draconian."

"Criminalizing essential and legitimate human rights work is a brazen attack on people seeking safe haven from persecution," Amnesty Europe director Gauri van Gulik said. "It is a new low point in an intensifying crackdown on civil society and it is something we will resist every step of the way."

ap, jcg/ (dpa, AFP, AP, Reuters)

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