Fekete János

4.7K posts

Fekete János

Fekete János

@pektester

Katılım Eylül 2016
133 Takip Edilen31 Takipçiler
Euronews magyarul
Euronews magyarul@euronewshu·
A dízel drágább Németországban, mint valaha, köszönhetően az iráni háborúnak. A politikusok keresik a megoldást a problémára. l.euronews.com/pZbO
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@euronewshu Én úgy gondolom mindenki a saját zsebében keresse a pénzt ne a máséban.
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@euronewshu A beszélgetések levonatából az látszik, hogy a lehallgatás európai érték. Ezért támogatják Magyar Pétert. Ő is lehallgatással kezdte pályafutását.
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Euronews magyarul
Euronews magyarul@euronewshu·
A beszélgetések levonatából úgy látszik, hogy Szijjártó Péter magyar külügyminiszter a Kreml kényére-kedvére jár el az Európai Unióban. #EuropeNews ➡️ l.euronews.com/74N9
Euronews magyarul tweet media
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@nexta_tv And where is the actual content of those earlier reports? That’s the question. Miss Kaja Kallis would have been better off negotiating with Mr. Lavrov. It would have been in Europe’s interest.
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NEXTA
NEXTA@nexta_tv·
“I’m always at your service”: leaked calls between Lavrov and Hungary’s FM Recordings of conversations between Sergey Lavrov and Péter Szijjártó suggest the Hungarian minister was willing to advance Moscow’s interests within the EU. In one call, Lavrov asks for sanctions on oligarch Alisher Usmanov’s sister to be lifted — Szijjártó responds that Hungary, together with Slovakia, is already preparing a proposal. She was later removed from the EU sanctions list. Before ending the call, Szijjártó also mentioned visiting Gazprom’s new headquarters and added: “I’m always at your service.” According to European intelligence officials, the tone of the exchanges resembles that of a “handler and source” rather than two equal officials. There have also been previous reports that Hungary shared details of closed EU discussions with Moscow.
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Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek)
(1/4) Gundalf, a 19-year-old IT specialist, outmanoeuvred the Constitution Protection Office and the entire intelligence apparatus that tried to blackmail him with fabricated accusations. Shocking details have emerged from today’s @444hu interview with the TISZA volunteer. Gundalf did not trust the good faith of services operating under political direction. He accurately anticipated what would happen: that the state party would selectively edit and publicly release his interrogation — supposedly classified as a state secret — for political purposes. That’s why he planted numerous elements in his story that could later be easily disproven. Some of the individuals he mentioned don’t even exist, and he never visited the Estonian or Ukrainian embassies. Nevertheless, the services took these claims as fact, then edited and released the report previously discussed by the National Security Committee. This suggests that the leadership of the Constitution Protection Office is either completely incompetent or operating under direct political control. The officers of the Hungarian Constitution Protection Office were misled by a 19-year-old. This says everything about the current state of national security when it is used for political purposes. We agree with Gundalf that the whole affair proves the state party’s political commissars have completely infiltrated the intelligence services.
Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek) tweet media
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Euronews magyarul
Euronews magyarul@euronewshu·
Egy Kreml-közeli szereplőkhöz köthető hálózat nagy médiumoknak adja ki magát, hogy hamis állításokat terjesszen Magyar Péter magyar ellenzéki vezetőről a parlamenti választások előtt. #TheCube l.euronews.com/Kig8
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@nexta_tv The problem is that you haven't been able to cite a single specific example. It's all just empty talk.
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NEXTA
NEXTA@nexta_tv·
🇭🇺 What a scandal! Orbán is massively bribing voters in Hungary’s poorest regions People are being paid $150–170 for the “right” vote, given firewood, medicine, and even offered temporary jobs. This is revealed in an independent Hungarian investigation titled “The Price of a Vote.” Journalists proved that representatives of Viktor Orbán travel to villages and literally buy votes. Those who refuse are threatened. 🔺Notably, the investigators initially only wanted to gather evidence of voter bribery — but ended up uncovering an entire system that cynically exploits the vulnerability of disadvantaged social groups where people are literally struggling to survive.
NEXTA tweet media
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@magyarpeterMP Majd, ha téged kérdezgetnek akkor légy bátor. Különösen, ha terítik a betlit.
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Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek)
Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek)@magyarpeterMP·
The state party’s surveillance of TISZA is digging it deeper and deeper into trouble. Bence Szabó’s courage has exposed the most serious series of national security crimes since the communist era — in which state and private intelligence services tried to dismantle the country’s strongest political community. Now, the government is no longer even denying that this was its objective. Today, the Hungarian government itself (!) released a heavily edited video of H. D.’s hearing by the Constitution Protection Office. The video makes it clear that the intelligence service does not even deny attempting to pressure the 19-year-old with fabricated accusations. They also do not deny that, behind it all, an organised intelligence service operation targeting TISZA is taking shape. What do we see in the government’s own edited footage? The story of a 19-year-old who took part in a NATO-accredited cybersecurity training course, which also took him to Estonia, a NATO member state. It also shows that if there were any attempts to recruit him, he rejected them. After he began working as a volunteer for TISZA, he was approached by both Hungarian state and private intelligence services and asked to cooperate in actions targeting the TISZA Party. He refused. After that, he was subjected to fabricated charges, house searches, interrogations by the Constitution Protection Office, pressure, and secret service surveillance - and he is not even 20 years old. This is being admitted by the Orbán government itself. They are openly acknowledging that they are using Hungary’s national security and intelligence services for political purposes.
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@magyarpeterMP Egy olyan százados urat mentegetsz aki valaha tett egy esküt amit megszegett. Ez aztán a hősiesség.
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@magyarpeterMP Roppant érdekes. Esetleg valamit hallhatnánk a gazdasági programotokról is. Netalán a szuverenitásunk megőrzéséről. A háború támogatásáról. Rezsicsökkentés megőrzéséről. SZJA politikáról. LMBTQ elképzelésekről. Bevándorlási akaratokról. Olcsó energia hordozók megtartásáról. CSOK.
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Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek)
Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek)@magyarpeterMP·
The Orbán mafia can see that it’s over. The "Dynasty" has begun moving its stolen wealth abroad. Orbán’s longtime ally and friend, György Matolcsy, the former national bank governor is now quietly liquidating his domestic holdings. Orbán’s oligarch, Lőrinc Mészáros, is securing his fortune. Orbán’s son-in-law, István Tiborcz, is shifting his assets abroad. Those at the very top already know that their power and their unchecked looting is coming to an end. They know the clock is ticking. That is why the scramble to abandon the sinking ship has begun. A TISZA government will uncover every case. It will review every contract. We will trace every financial transaction. We will know exactly where the money came from, who it passed through, and where it ended up. It will no longer be possible to make public money disappear without consequences, nor to move abroad what belongs to the Hungarian people. To @PM_ViktorOrban and his circle, we send this message today, in the coming 16 days, and especially on April 12: this era is over.
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Brussels Signal
Brussels Signal@brusselssignal·
The Hungarian opposition has resorted to a smear campaign. Why? To create the artificial impression that the elections are neither fair nor lawful. This is its backup plan should Viktor Orbán win: to have Brussels refuse to recognise the result, writes @michalkarnowski. brusselssignal.eu/2026/03/news-s…
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@euronewshu Ki elégedett? Senki. Kérdezzék meg az állampolgárokat minden országban és nagyon megfognak lepődni. Persze ezt nem merik megtenni.
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Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek)
Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek)@magyarpeterMP·
A Dinasztia megkezdte a lopott szajré külföldre menekítését. Már folyik a dokumentumok megsemmisítése. Hamarosan egymást fogják feldobni. 16 nap. Készüljetek!
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@444hu A figura valamikor tett egy esküt amit be kell tartani. Ha nem tartja be annak törvényszerű következményei vannak. Ilyen egyszerű.
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444
444@444hu·
Az ügyvéd nem számított rá, hogy ilyen gyorsan meggyanúsítják védencét. Teljes cikk a 444-en: buff.ly/RF23mmi
444 tweet media
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Fekete János
Fekete János@pektester·
@Aceusz2 Legalább egy orosz ügynököt ideje lenne már megnevezni.
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Aceusz
Aceusz@Aceusz2·
Vitézy a fideszes kormányzásról ATV-s riportban! Lenyűgöző a lényeglátása! Minden jel szerint ideje az orosz ügynökök távozásának a magyar közéletből!
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Szabolcs Panyi
Szabolcs Panyi@panyiszabolcs·
‼️Statement on the Orbán Government Accusing Me, an Investigative Journalist, of Espionage‼️ Today, the Hungarian government has filed a complaint against me for espionage. Accusing investigative journalists of espionage is virtually unprecedented in the 21st century for an EU member state. This is typical of Putin’s Russia, Belarus, and similar regimes. I have spent over a decade documenting how Russian spies and interests have penetrated Hungarian politics, so I am probably the least surprised by this. Despite growing signs that the Hungarian government acts as a Kremlin ally and copies the Russian model, I still trust that parts of the Hungarian state—and the judiciary—follow the Hungarian constitution, not that of the Russian Federation. I have never engaged in espionage. I see my work as journalistic counterintelligence—from exposing the hacking of the Hungarian Foreign Ministry by Russian actors to revealing the activities of Hungarian pro-Kremlin propagandists. Defending myself publicly would be easier if I were not bound by source protection. But that remains my top priority. I cannot reveal who provides me information or what I receive, including from within Hungarian state structures. If I were not a journalist, I could list many facts proving it is impossible for the Hungarian state to genuinely believe I am spying. Certain meetings, contacts, and information gathering could never have happened otherwise. This baseless accusation now forces me to share details of a specific investigation, including a conversation with a confidential source that appears to have been wiretapped. Normally, this would appear in a finished article or my upcoming book—not here. (It will appear there as well.) Since 2023, I have investigated whether the relationship between Péter Szijjártó and Russian officials exceeds legal limits. The published audio, where I’m heard talking to a source, mentions that communication between Szijjártó and Sergey Lavrov is recorded by EU intelligence services. Less attention has gone to my point that this relationship raises strong suspicion of political intelligence activity and influence operations in Russia’s interest. These are serious claims and hard to prove. As a journalist, I cannot force anyone to speak or hand over documents. That is why gathering this information has taken so long—and why I spoke to that sensitive source (while the conversation was secretly recorded). Serious claims require serious evidence, and I believe I have gathered some. I have not engaged in espionage. I have not cooperated with any foreign intelligence service in surveilling Szijjártó. Instead, I tried to verify earlier fragments of information about Szijjártó–Lavrov communication. I sought to identify the channels and phone numbers used, and whether a secret channel—possibly used by Russian intelligence—exists. In other words, whether Szijjártó uses a hidden device or number unknown even within the Hungarian Foreign Ministry. This was only one part of my research. The other, more serious topic is this: Since at least 2016–2017, EU and NATO intelligence services have had indications that large amounts of cash and precious stones may have been transported from Russia on Hungarian government aircraft or private jets used by government figures. Officials from at least six countries made such claims to me. These signals did not come from monitoring Hungarian targets, but, for example, from intercepting Russian officials discussing or preparing such shipments. Alongside Szijjártó–Lavrov communication, I examined how baggage screening and handling works on such flights, which officials travel with what luggage, whether more packages arrive from Moscow than depart, and how such shipments could be handled discreetly. I know how serious this is, and I would not have written even this much—but since I do not know what else may be taken from the edited recording, or what fabricated accusations (like, for example, that I was seeking such details to commit terrorism) may follow, I believe I must share this now. Why do I investigate all this? According to many sources familiar with the Hungarian state and counterintelligence, there is no independent body in the Orbán system able to investigate or act if a senior official is suspected of espionage. Government members direct intelligence services and set expectations. The services lack both tools and authority to investigate a government member. I knew this would be difficult when I chose to pursue it. But few people in Hungary can or dare to do this, so I felt it was my duty. We have now reached the point where the Orbán government—of which Szijjártó is still a member—aware of my reporting plans and the risk they pose, has preemptively accused me of espionage. I am a Hungarian patriot. I serve the public. As an investigative journalist, my job is to hold power accountable. Neither political theater nor legal threats will deter me.
Szabolcs Panyi tweet media
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JB
JB@ladysweden·
The aggressive candidate from the Tisza Party and his cult attacked a Megafon colleague who was filming with a drone. They surrounded his car and wouldn’t let him leave! Tamás Tóth, the Tisza Party candidate in 45th place, who was wearing a white T-shirt and a blue vest, threw something at the man. They did this because Megafon was using drone photos to show that few people attended Tisza events. Tóth even went over and tried to open the driver’s door, but the young man locked it in time. What would this madman have done if the door had been open? How dare he try to open someone else’s car door? It’s shocking!
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