Budapest police officers under review for neglecting murdered Japanese woman’s “cries for help”

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At least three Budapest police officers are under review for neglecting the murdered Japanese woman Megumi’s cries for help. The woman turned to the authorities at least twice for receiving death threats from his former husband and for the robbery of her computer. The police said that the number of death threats was not enough for them to act despite once the ex-husband had written to the woman that she would die a painful, slow death.
3 Budapest police officers under review
Last autumn, David, the ex-husband and alleged murderer of Megumi, wrote “You will die a painful, slow death”. She immediately turned to the local police, showing a similar threat from his husband, but the harassment was not enough for the authorities. The 5th district police rejected the report, but their first official notification about the decision was dismissed by the prosecutor’s office since it lacked an explanation. The second try proved to be acceptable, and the Budapest police department started an interior probe against the officers involved after the tragic death was revealed.
According to Blikk, the communications department of the Budapest Police Department said they would have results by the following week. They also added that the police department established contact with the Irish and Dutch colleagues. Ferenc Rab, the deputy spokesman of the Budapest prosecutor’s office, told Blikk that they arrested the suspect for 30 days for investigation.







A lot of women in Hungary don’t bother to go to the police if faced with domestic violence or sexual assault because not only do they know the police are not likely to help but that they may even receive humiliating treatment from them. How much more explicit can you get than a death threat in writing like that? What’s makes things worse is the way the Fidesz government treats women as breeding machines rather that people with equal rights and career aspirations the same as men. The paternalistic treatment of women in Hungary is more than a generation behind the modern world.