Information leaflet on police measures and coercive measures
Available here only in Hungarian. Supported by: Open Society Institute
Available here only in Hungarian. Supported by: Open Society Institute
The police failed to consider that the assault on the Chairman of the Raoul Wallenberg Association bears an anti-Semitic bias and failed to investigate the incident as hate crime despite the fact that the law provides greater protection ...
According to the Eötvös Károly Institute, the Hungarian Helsinki Committee and the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union, the Constitutional Court’s decision to hear the President of the National Judicial Office behind closed doors undermines the transparency of decision-making by ...
HUMAN RIGHTS LEGAL COUNSELLING PROGRAM
If you wish to seek legal assistance, please send us your complaint in writing (1242 Budapest, PO Box 317).
Before coming to our office, please set up an appointment on the telephone. We can only provide consultations based on a prior appointment.
We can take your phone calls to set up an appointment, and to inform you about your written complaints during the following hours:
The personal meetings can only take place during the above hours. Beyond these hours, we cannot take your phone calls or meet personally.
Staff members, attorneys and interns of the Hungarian Helsinki Committee share case-related information only among each other for the purposes of professional consultation. This information will not be shared with third parties.
In your letter, please provide an outline of your complaint or case, and describe the most important features of the case:
Please attach copies of all documents taken in the case (your own letters and decisions, judgments delivered by the courts or authorities). If you have medical reports which are important in the case, please also send a copy of those as well.
Please also let us know how we can contact you (telephone number, email or postal address).
We respond in writing to all written requests for assistance within 60 days, informing complainants whether we are able to provide assistance and about the next steps.
The Hungarian Helsinki Committee and the attorneys working with us maintain the right to decide which cases to assist, based on the HHC’s mandate and their own professional judgment.