Hungary jails migrants for 3 years for border crossing


A Hungarian court on Friday sentenced 10 migrants to between one and three years in jail for illegally crossing the border during a riot in September 2015, after Hungary built a razor wire fence to seal its frontier with Serbia. It was the first case to come to trial under a law passed days before the incident that made illegal border crossing as part of a rioting crowd punishable by between one and five years in prison.Nearly half the more than 1 million migrants, mostly fleeing conflict in the Middle East, who surged into Europe last year in the continent's biggest movement of people since World War Two passed through Hungary, often causing chaos at borders and along the main migration routes. Prosecutors for Csongrad county on Friday charged two Romanians with human trafficking and one of them with attempted murder and excessive cruelty for trying to smuggle at least 106 migrants from Hungary to Austria in a lorry last June. The unventilated truck was left abandoned in the summer heat, and the migrants only escaped by forcing open the doors. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has taken a tough line against migration, and says the European Union risks seeing other migration-weary member states follow Britain to the exit unless it does the same.The mostly Syrian defendants convicted in Szeged, the capital of Csongrad, were part of a crowd that crossed into Hungary on Sept. 16 as hundreds of migrants forced open the border gate while police responded with water cannon and tear gas. "The court deems them to be a part of the rioting crowd as they took advantage of the lack of control to enter Hungary and the European Union," judge Janos Arany told the court in his reasoning. Those convicted included three handicapped people, one of whom was rolled across the border in a wheelbarrow by a helper. These three had their sentences suspended. Nine defendants received sentences of 12 or 14 months. One defendant received a three-year sentence because he issued instructions to people through a loudspeaker.