Migrant crisis: Hungarian camerawoman apologises for kicking migrants
- Published
A Hungarian camerawoman has been sacked after being accused of tripping up fleeing migrants
A Hungarian journalist sacked for kicking and tripping migrants near the Serbian border has apologised and insisted she is not a "heartless, racist, child-kicking camerawoman".
Petra Laszlo said in a letter, external to the Magyar Nemzet newspaper (in Hungarian) that "something snapped" in her as migrants broke through a police cordon.
She said that she reacted out of panic and felt she had to "defend herself".
Prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation into the incident.
Ms Laszlo said: "I do not deserve the political witch-hunts against me, nor the smears or the death threats.
"I'm just a woman, and now an unemployed mother of small children, who made a bad decision in a situation of panic. I am truly sorry," she said.
The footage of Ms Laszlo kicking people and tripping them up, including a man carrying a small child, sparked outrage when it surfaced earlier this week.
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Ms Laszlo was filmed tripping a man carrying a small boy
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She said in her letter that she made a "bad decision in a moment of panic"
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She was sacked by Hungary's N1TV station, which is affiliated to the far-right Jobbik party.
The station said in a statement that she had shown "unacceptable behaviour".
Hungary has become a key transit point for migrants on the journey towards Western Europe, with more than 150,000 people arriving this year.
Hungary's leaders have been criticised for what has been perceived as a harsher stance than other European states towards migrants.
Prime Minister Viktor Orban has warned of Hungary being "overrun" with refugees who threatened to undermine Europe's "Christian roots".