Report to be Introduced to the Plenary Session: Addressed to the President

Records of this digital collection were assembled to document the work of the UN Special Committee on the Problem of Hungary established on January 10, 1957 by the United Nations General Assembly for the purpose of investigating the 1956 Hungarian revolution. Principal contributor(s): United Nations...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Héderváry, Claire de
Institution:Open Society Archives at Central European University
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: 1959
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10891/osa:1e2c797f-2af7-43f9-a240-2c380c0141aa
Description
Summary:Records of this digital collection were assembled to document the work of the UN Special Committee on the Problem of Hungary established on January 10, 1957 by the United Nations General Assembly for the purpose of investigating the 1956 Hungarian revolution. Principal contributor(s): United Nations. General Assembly Deeply moving speech in defense of the right of the Hungarian people to political independence and national freedom. Small countries are no less concerned with retaining their national and political identity than Great Powers. The Uprising was a spontaneous outburst of the Hungarian people against the intolerable oppression of tyrannical and largely alien rule, and for the cause of national freedom. Also citing Khrushchev, the draft report accuses the Rákosi regime of excesses regarding the uprising, in opposition to the official Hungarian version that the uprising was incited and organized from outside with the aid of propaganda, money and gun-running.
Published:1959