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Hungary government reports Orban-era IT contracts to police

By Thomson Reuters Jul 16, 2026 | 10:07 AM

BUDAPEST, July 16 (Reuters) – Hungary’s government said on Thursday it sent a report to police about the ​suspected misuse of public funds during ‌purchases of educational software made by the previous administration of Viktor Orban.

Prime Minister Peter Magyar, who ousted nationalist premier Orban in ‌April ​elections, has pledged to ⁠clamp down on corruption ⁠and set up an independent body to probe alleged graft under Orban. Orban has denied any wrongdoing.

Magyar’s Minister ​of Science and Technology, Zoltan Tanacs, said on Thursday his staff had ⁠reviewed IT contracts ⁠dating back to 2019, and ​had raised questions about more than 100 ​billion forints ($316.07 million) spent on educational software.

“The ‌findings showed a lack of competition, monopolistic systems … poor quality, and institutions exposed to this situation and unjustifiably ⁠high prices,” Tanacs told a briefing.

“The state made using these software systems compulsory … and then ⁠schools and ‌institutions had no choice,” ⁠Tanacs added.

European Commission President Ursula ​von ‌der Leyen said in May ​the EU ⁠would unlock €16.4 billion ($18.76 billion) of money for Budapest that had been previously withheld over concerns of corruption.

($1 = 0.8740 euros)

($1 = 316.3900 forints)

(Reporting by Krisztina Than; Editing by ​Andrew Heavens)