Prime Minister Viktor Orban, in Belgrade on Wednesday, called for a ceasefire in Ukraine “to avert imminent danger”. “We want peace and a ceasefire,” the prime minister said at a joint press conference with Serbian President Alexandar Vucic and Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer.
Referring to the missile incident in which two people died in Poland on Tuesday, Orbán said “it is important to express our sympathy and to be aware that since there is war in the neighbourhood, we are in danger”. “We are in danger in an economic sense, too,” Orbán said, referring to an outage of oil supplies to Hungary via the Druzhba pipeline on Tuesday. “When your citizens and your economy are in danger, you must singularly focus on averting that danger, and this can only be achieved through a ceasefire,” he said. The prime minister said the Hungarian government continued to urge the European Union to facilitate Serbia’s full and swift integration into the bloc. He said Serbia’s EU membership was in the interests of Europe, adding the community “could fight migration a lot more easily were Serbia inside the EU already”.
“Serbia should have been granted membership yesterday, or the day before yesterday, and we’d be a better situation now [if that had been the case],” he said. He said Hungary was not in a decision-making position on the matter, but it could “build an alliance with countries that support [Serbia’s] membership.” Hungary assumes the rotating EU presidency in the second half of 2024, and it will be able to aid the integration process, he added.
Until Serbia becomes an EU member, “there can be only one goal: to shift the lines of defence further south and to create joint border defence with Serbia and Austria,” he said. Hungary stands ready to provide personnel and equipment, he added.
Read alsoSerbia calls for Hungarian help
Orbán: ‘We want peace and ceasefire’ in Ukraine
Calling for long-term cooperation, Orbán said “the problem that we call migration will be with us for the long run.” Orbán said Hungary had to bear the “dual pressure” of refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine and illegal migration from the direction of Serbia. Hungarians and Serbs, he said, stood together “in good times and bad”. The two countries have been destined to cooperate, he said, adding that Vucic was “the best Serbian partner to Hungary in its history”.
Concerning illegal migration, Orbán said 250,000 illegal entries had been prevented in 2023 and “there are not only more migrants but they are increasingly aggressive”. “People smugglers not only have guns but will use them against Hungary’s border guards,” he added. The whole of the Balkans “suffers from migration”, which must be stopped “rather than managed”, he insisted. “It must be made clear that they cannot enter our countries illegally,” he said. Since 2015, Hungary’s border control-related spending has totalled 1.6 billion euros, of which the EU reimbursed a mere 1.2 percent, he said. “This clearly shows we can only rely on ourselves,” he added.
Serbia is key to Europe’s security, and when it protects its own borders it also protects Hungary, Austria, and the whole of the EU, Orbán said. Answering a question, Orban said refugees were governed by international regulations, and guest workers could be granted residence and work permits by their host countries. “The category of the migrant, however, is not legally regulated, so it is illegal by definition.”
“Migrants are persons seeking to make an illegal border crossing, and violations of the law must be met with the force of the law,” Orbán said. “Hungary is a serious country, with its own regulations; and it will enforce those regulations by force if needed.” Orban noted that the only pipeline “transporting significant amounts of gas” to Hungary runs through Serbia, while Serbia had received its gas from Hungary for long periods in the past. “This clearly shows how the two countries can rely on each other,” Orbán said.
Before the talks, the three leaders signed a Memorandum of Understanding on fighting illegal migration.
Read alsoLeading Hungarian politician on Ukraine’s death list
Source: MTI
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1 Comment
Again – let’s leave our Politicians Land of Fairytales for a moment and focus on what EU criteria Serbia must meet:
1. stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect for and protection of minorities;
2. a functioning market economy and the ability to cope with competitive pressure and market forces within the EU;
3. the ability to take on the obligations of membership, including the capacity to effectively implement the rules, standards and policies that make up the body of EU law (the ‘ acquis ’), and adherence to the aims of political, economic and monetary union.
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/EN/legal-content/glossary/accession-criteria-copenhagen-criteria.html
And yes – we struggle to mee some of these, now (which should make the EU even more wary re new Members)