BUDAPEST, Hungary - Thousands of protesters demonstrated outside parliament 
for a fourth day Wednesday demanding Hungary's prime minister resign over a 
leaked recording in which he admitted his government lied about the dismal state 
of the economy. 
 
 
   Hungarian riot police 
 arrest a right wing demonstrator during an anti-government protest in 
 Budapest, Hungary, Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2006. Police deployed forces in 
 new, stronger riot gear Wednesday and declared they were ready for any 
 situation as the Hungarian capital recovered from a second day of mob 
 violence, and prepared for more. [AP] | 
The demonstrators' numbers swelled to about 15,000 by late evening, but Prime 
Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany stood his ground, insisting his government intended to 
press ahead with economic reforms. 
Before dawn, a much smaller group of protesters marched to the nearby 
headquarters of state television, demanding to be allowed to proclaim their 
complaints on a live broadcast after police used tear gas and water cannons to 
repel dozens of mostly young men who stormed the building's main entrance. 
At least two cars were set on fire outside the television headquarters and 
protesters kept charging the building and throwing rocks at police inside. A 
nearby stone memorial to Soviet troops who ousted the Nazis from Hungary at the 
end of World War II was vandalized. 
Several violent outbursts during the dayslong protests have left about 140 
officers injured, including 38 early Wednesday, and 137 people have been 
detained, said Arpad Szabadfi, deputy chief of national police. Dozens of 
demonstrator also were hurt, officials said. 
The violence shook a country that for much of its last two decades had been 
held up as a model of progress following the collapse of communism in eastern 
Europe. 
Gyurcsany called it Hungary's "longest and darkest night" since the end of 
communist rule in 1989. 
The calls for the resignation of Gyurcsany came after leaks of his taped 
comments that he had "lied morning, evening and night" about the economy. 
The tape was made at a closed-door meeting in late May, weeks after 
Gyurcsany's government became the first in post-communist Hungary to win 
re-election. 
Confronted with initial excerpts of the 25-minute recording which Hungarian 
state radio put up on its Web site Sunday afternoon, Gyurcsany not only 
acknowledged their authenticity but seemed relieved they had been made public ¡ª 
leading to speculation that the leak came from sources close to him. 
The public was stunned by the blunt admissions of government ineptitude 
during its first term and the cynicism contained in a 25-minute tape widely 
aired and published by news media. 
"We screwed up. Not a little, a lot," Gyurcsany was heard saying. "No 
European country has done something as boneheaded as we have." 
"I almost died when for a year and a half we had to pretend we were 
governing. Instead, we lied morning, evening and night," he told his fellow 
Socialists. 
The 45-year-old Gyurcsany, his party's golden boy since he was elected prime 
minister in late 2004, said the economy had been kept afloat only through 
"divine providence, the abundance of cash in the world economy and hundreds of 
tricks." 
Along with Russian President Vladimir Putin, he counts among his friends 
Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain and President Bush, whom he presented with 
a handmade pair of riding boots during the U.S. leader's visit in June.