by Bill White

[2013]

The new nationalist government in Hungary has indicted Hungarian Communist militia leader Bela Biszku for war crimes committed against Hungarian patriots during the 1956 uprising against Soviet-Jewish rule.





According to the indictment, Biszku was a member of the Hungarian Socialist Worker’s Party central committee and the Provisional Executive Committee, who organized thugs and killers to root out political dissent in the wake of the Soviet invasion that ended the uprising. According to the indictment, Biszku directed the killing of the three civilians at the Budapest Western Station on December 6, 1956, directed a massacre of women and children in the city of Salgotarjan on December 8, 1956, and covered up the activities of Bolshevik death squads, which he was apprised of in report issued April 9, 1957.





The indictment appears to be first set of allegations raised against a European Jew for crimes against the humanity of Europe’s White gentile population.





In 1956, Hungarian patriots seized Budapest and began hanging the Jewish Soviet commissars. The Soviet Union responded with tanks. In the struggle that followed, 25,000 Hungarians and 7,000 Russian soldiers died. The Soviets then conducted a general purge of Hungarian nationalists.





Recently, the Hungarian Jobbik party won control of parliament, and began renationalizing Hungary and its economy. Hungary has quickly paid off its debts to the IMF, and is considering bringing charges against the government officials who drove Hungary into debt and began selling its people out to austerity. Jobbik has also advocated withdrawing Hungary from the European Union.





Bisku’s arrest may be the first in a changing Europe, as nationalist parties make gains across Europe. The nationalist Austrian Freedom Party recently made huge gains in the Austrian parliament. The French National Front may emerge as France’s largest party in a series of pending elections, after winning a 56% majority in an important southern French department. And, even in staid multi-culturalist Britain, the anti-EU, but not nationalist, UK Independence Party has been contending to become Britain’s third largest party.



