Budapest mayor proposes naming site after Roma leader helping Hungarians in 1990 Romania pogrom
Gergely Karacsony said on Facebook that the idea had come from several Roma organisations. The mayor said that “when ruling powers seek to divide a country it always leads to terrible acts and ramifications”. “We must learn the lesson of mistakes made in the past through facing those mistakes,” he added.
Referring to developments in 1990, Karacsony said that some 10,000 ethnic Hungarians gathered for a peaceful demonstration in the centre of Targu Mures on March 20, after a mob attacked the headquarters of ethnic Hungarian party RMDSZ and brutally beat up several Hungarians, including well-known author Andras Suto, the day before. The protesters were again being threatened by violent groups, when Puczi’s people appeared chanting the slogan “Hungarians, don’t worry, here come the Gypsies”.
Puczi was arrested and held in prison for several months. He then fled to Hungary from persecution by the Romanian police. He died impoverished in Budapest, in 2009.