Orbán faces accusations of staged “false-flag” gas attack, Magyar asks to be included in Defence Council session

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Earlier today, reports emerged of a potentially explosive incident at critical gas infrastructure connecting Hungary and Serbia. In response, Prime Minister Orbán Viktor has convened an extraordinary session of the National Defence Council on Sunday afternoon. Péter Magyar also asked to be included in the session.

Tisza Party leader calls for inclusion in emergency Defence Council

Péter Magyar, leader of the opposition Tisza Party, reacted quickly on social media, demanding to be included in the Defence Council’s emergency meeting. He argued that regardless of who orchestrated the event, the situation would ultimately fall to the Tisza government to resolve after the upcoming elections.

In a Facebook post, Magyar claimed that multiple sources had warned of potential provocations ahead of the 12 April parliamentary elections, allegedly orchestrated with the assistance of Serbia and Russia. “Several have publicly indicated that ‘something will happen’ at the gas pipeline in Serbia around Easter, just one week before Hungary’s elections. And so it did,” he wrote.

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Claims of Russian and Serbian involvement

Magyar suggested that these events may represent a “false-flag” operation intended to stir fear among the Hungarian public. He criticised the Prime Minister for what he described as deliberate panic-inducing tactics, allegedly guided by Russian advisors.

“If Orbán and his propaganda use this provocation for campaign purposes, it will be a public admission that this was a premeditated false-flag operation,” he added.

The Tisza Party leader emphasised that Hungarian citizens’ trust in domestic security services has been eroded in recent weeks due to previous intelligence failures. He promised that under a Tisza-led government, Hungary would restore order, peace, and security, ensuring the country’s safety within the European Union and NATO frameworks. “The culture of fear propagated by Orbán will be replaced by freedom and confidence,” Magyar wrote.

What happened?

As we reported earlier today, security units discovered two large backpacks containing highly destructive explosives and detonation fuses just a few hundred metres from the critical gas infrastructure linking Serbia and Hungary. As a result, Viktor Orbán announced he would convene an extraordinary Defence Council meeting for Sunday afternoon.

National security expert Péter Buda claimed on his Substack that some circles had been discussing a possible false-flag scenario involving Hungarian-linked critical infrastructure on the Serbian side of the border even before the discovery became public.

A similar hypothetical scenario had also been outlined days earlier by Russia expert András Rácz, who described Serbia as a theoretically convenient location for such an operation in a fictionalised analytical post.

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