Similar but somewhat specific regulations are found in other countries. The Federal Electoral Law of Germany in Article 13 paragraph 3 introduces such restrictions on citizens who are “accommodated in a psychiatric hospital under an order pursuant to Article 63 of the Penal Code in conjunction with Article 20 of the Penal Code.” The Hungarian Constitution in Article 70 paragraph 3 regulates that “the right to vote shall not be granted to persons who are under guardianship limiting or excluding their capacity, to persons who are subject to a final legal judgement forbidding them to participate in public affairs, nor to persons who are incarcerated on the basis of a final legal judgment or who are under compulsory institutional care on the basis of a final legal judgment rendered in criminal proceedings.” In Belgium the Article 7 of the Electoral law restricts the right to vote of individuals who have been declared mentally incapable or placed in Government’s custody in application of the law. The Law on Basic Provisions on Elections and Voter Registers of Turkey, in Article 8 prescribes that persons who have been placed under the care of a guardian and who are barred from public service shall not be entitled to vote.