Orbán: ‘Nothing wrong’ with S Hungary village protests against encampment of migrant children
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán on Friday said he saw nothing wrong with the residents of the village of Öcsény, in southern Hungary, protesting against the encampment of migrant children in their area, arguing that Hungarians “have been told so many lies in connection with migration”, that it was understandable that locals would be suspicious of the move.
Speaking to reporters ahead of the European Union’s Digital Summit in Tallinn, Orbán said Hungarians “do not want to accept migrants into their country or their village”.
“They’ve been told so many lies in connection with migration that they don’t believe that only children would be coming,” he said.
“Hungarians like children,” Orbán insisted, adding that they are also willing to help those in need. “But Hungarians have been lied to so many times that if they are told that they’d be receiving children, their response would be: ‘first children, then parents, then family reunification and then we’re in trouble.'”
Orbán said the people of Öcsény were right to express their opinions in the matter.
Fully 81 percent of people in the Visegrad Four (V4) countries are dissatisfied with the way Brussels is handling the migration issue, a comprehensive survey released by the Nézőpont research institute shows, read here the full article.
Also we wrote on this week, EU member states have fulfilled less than a third of asylum-seeker relocation commitments, with Hungary and Poland refusing to accept any, Amnesty International’s Brussels office said on Monday, a day before the expiry of the EU relocation scheme deadline.
Photo: MTI
Source: MTI
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