The Guardian

Fake news is bad. But fake history is even worse | Natalie Nougayrède

From Turkey to China, strongmen rewrite the past to suit their ends. But democracies are not immune to this revisionism
Turkish president Recep Erdoğan and his wife, Emine, attend a rally in Istanbul. Photograph: Osman Orsal /Reuters

On 22 July, the Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán stood before university students and delivered a titled “Will Europe belong to Europeans?” It contained rambling passages about how a “Soros plan” was in place to bring in “hundreds of thousands of migrants every year – if possible, a million – to the territory of the European Union from the Muslim world”. The aim was to transform the continent into “a new, Islamised Europe”. This, Orbán argued, was what lay behind “Brussels’ continuous and stealthy withdrawal of powers from the nation states”. Orbán has form when it comes to this kind of

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