Polish FM Jacek Czaputowicz meets FM Szijjártó in Budapest
Hungary and Poland will continue “giving each other every assistance” in debates around “finding a response to challenges of a new world order emerging after the (coronavirus) epidemic”, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said after talks with his Polish counterpart on Wednesday.
Speaking at a press conference with Jacek Czaputowicz, Szijjártó said that both the Hungarian and the Polish governments have recently been the targets of “baseless charges and attacks” but the two countries could rely on each other “in these difficult times”.
Hungary and Poland are “not only friends but strategic allies” and have similar positions on “dilemmas in global politics”, Szijjártó said.
Szijjártó spoke highly of the central European countries for their handling of the coronavirus epidemic, and said that those states had been able to control the situation and keep the number of Covid-19 cases low. The countries in question, he said, have now taken significant steps to restart their economies.
Central Europe is in the focus of Hungary’s foreign policy, and further strengthening cooperation is in its national interest, Szijjártó said.
Szijjártó and Czaputowicz agreed that the European Union’s cohesion funding should not be cut in the next cycles and made a commitment to the EU’s further enlargement.
They saw eye to eye concerning the necessity of fighting illegal migration, and shared a position against any migrant distribution mechanism in Europe, Szijjarto said.
Szijjártó also noted that
Poland is Hungary’s fourth largest trading partner, the annual turnover of bilateral trade exceeding 10 billion euros.
Czaputowicz said that his country, which will take over the rotating presidency of the Visegrad Group on July 1, is preparing to be a “dynamic president” and “show the world and Europe how efficient the grouping is”.
Concering criticism on Hungary, Czaputowicz said that those remarks “often proved completely groundless”.
Answering a question, Szijjártó said that the government expected the EU to ease restrictions on state subsidies to investment projects.
Czaputowicz said his government was against European plans to tie community funding to the rule of law in the target country, and argued that it was impossible to set up “objective criteria” of evaluation.
Szijjártó said it was “unacceptable” to handle “funds payable to Hungary under the treaties” on “subjective criteria”. “There are no problems with the rule of law in these two countries and such debates will but weaken Europe and compromise European unity,” Szijjártó insisted.