Hungarian FM: Global security at greatest risk in 70 years
Global security is facing the largest risks in 70 years, and the threat of terrorism and a third world war has never been greater, the minister of foreign affairs and trade said in Riyadh on Thursday, where he attended a meeting of the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS.
According to a ministry statement, Péter Szijjártó told the meeting co-chaired by the US and Saudi Arabia that Hungary continued to support the most vulnerable communities to allow them to make a living in their homelands.
Hungary will plough HUF 1.6 billion (EUR 4.3m) into supporting another 16 projects in Iraq and Syria, to help reconstruct and operate schools and hospitals, as well as important religious, welfare and humanitarian institutions, he said.
Currently, 134 Hungarian troops are participating in the Coalition’s training mission in Iraq, he added.
Hungary also supports the UN’s initiative to hold ISIS soldiers accountable for their crimes, he said. Those oppressing communities or committing terrorist acts should know that they will be punished for those crimes, he said.
Hungarians, who are facing challenges from the east and south simultaneously, know that global security is impossible without a determined and successful stand against terrorism, he said.
Szijjártó noted that although ISIS “seemed to have been defeated in recent years”, the group has surfaced in various locations again and again, mostly in Africa and the Middle East.
Terrorism and mass migration form a vicious circle, he said. The higher the threat of terrorism, the bigger the chance of growing migration pressure in Europe. Hungary is at the forefront of that since the Western Balkans migration route has become the primary way to travel to the EU, he said.
The fight against terrorism is therefore a priority for Hungary, he said. Europe could not handle two security challenges at the same time, especially under the weight of the serious consequences of the war in Ukraine, he said.
Threats to global security are the gravest of the past 70 years. Countries’ open references to nuclear power and terror threats are also the strongest in 70 years, he said.
A victory against terrorist organisations is key to ensuring peace in Hungary’s eastern neighbour and to warding off migration pressure in the south, Szijjártó said.
Source: MTI
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