Hungarian FM: EU passes new sanctions against Russia

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The foreign affairs council of the European Union has agreed on a new package of sanctions against Russia, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on the sidelines of a council meeting in Brussels on Monday.
Szijjártó said the new sanctions were “basically an update to earlier rules” and did not contain any restrictions concerning energy imports, the foreign ministry quoted him as saying.
Szijjártó said developments in Ukraine reflected that the EU had “miscalculated” its responses, adding that “the latest measures were also based on the earlier approach”. The Hungarian government “did not break unity and did not boycot the agreement though it thinks that the community should strive for peace”, he said.
The package does not include sanctions concerning Russia’s Gazprombank, Szijjártó said, adding that the Hungarian government had “very firmly” indicated earlier that it would not support such measures.
On the subject of European concerns over shrinking gas supplies, Szijjártó said it was “strange” in view of earlier statements suggesting that the western European countries in question had resolved the issue. “The current fright shows something different, that reality has won,” he said, adding that “gas imports are a matter of infrastructure rather than ideology”. “It seems the western part of Europe has not managed to overwrite the laws of physics,” he said.
Hungary’s supplies are uninterrupted, with reserves to cover 26.6 percent of the country’s annual gas consumption, as against the EU average of 15 percent, Szijjáró said, adding that talks were underway to purchase an additional 700 million cubic metres of gas “both from the east and the west”.







