We are pleased to share the thoughts of Gyorgy Tatar, Chair of the Budapest Centre, on the follow up of the GAAMAC IV conference.

You can read the article here
1636679844106The Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention is proud to share the interview to Dr. Gyorgy Tatar, the Director of the Centre and Chair of the Board of Trustees, at the 2021 EFUS conference on Security, Democracy and Cities.

We invite you to take a look at the interview here.

The Budapest Centre calls your attention to the newly published EPLO statement on The European Peace Facility: Minimising Significant Risks in Implementation.

You can find the document here.
We continue to enrich the content of our E-Youth Library and to present new videos, documents and podcasts on a wide range of topics every week.

You are kindly invited to visit the Library regularly.
At least 15 bodies found in a remote jungle were brutally tortured and executed, villagers say.

The murder of more than a dozen people whose bodies exhibited signs of torture and were left to rot in a forest in Myanmar’s remote Sagaing region this week was carried out by troops loyal to the country’s junta and should be classified as a “war crime,” witnesses and a rights lawyer said Tuesday.

You can read the article here.
We are offering an internship position starting from June 15th for a minimum of 4 months.

Applications must be submitted by 31/05/2021.

You can find further information regarding the position and how to apply here.
We invite you to read the essay "What is at stake in handling the case of the Uyghurs?" prepared by the Director of the Centre, Dr. Gyorgy Tatar.

The Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention thereby urges the International Community to take all appropriate measures discussed in the document to tackle the Uyghur Genocide and prevent further escalation.

Click here to download the essay.

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The Budapest Centre invites its visitors to watch the newest and insightful event on the Early Warning Project of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

"We know that genocide and related crimes against humanity are not spontaneous,” said Naomi Kikoler, Director of the Simon-Skjodt Center. “If we take the idea of preventing genocide seriously, we must seek to identify risks before systematic attacks on civilian populations begin.”

You can find further information here.