Polish PM highlights importance of V4 cooperation – Morawiecki in Budapest

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Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki in Budapest on Wednesday stressed the significance of Visegrad cooperation. The central European region is a stabilising force in the European Union and it wants to have a say in the bloc according to its weight, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán told a press conference after a meeting with his Polish counterpart. 

The four Visegrad countries are important constituents of the European Union, contributing to its economic growth and stability, Morawiecki told.

“We trust in the EU and in its values, and seek to jointly develop it,” he said.

The Polish premier said they completely shared the Hungarian position on the migration crisis.

Citizens of sovereign states have a right to decide with whom they wish to live together, Morawiecki said. He said his country is firmly against any mandatory migrant quotas, and insisted that the European Commission has no authority to introduce such a mechanism. He added that “aid should go where the problem is” and said that his country had contributed to relevant funds.

Morawiecki insisted that more and more European Union members supported Poland’s position and added that “the Austrian example is spectacular”.

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Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán., photo: MTI

Orbán says region wants voice in EU

“While economies in our region are doing well, the EU’s migration policy has failed spectacularly,” Orbán said at the joint press conference.

“We are the European Union’s engine of growth,” Orbán said.

Central Europe is the bloc’s fastest-growing region, “without which we would not even be talking about growth in the EU”, he said.

The prime minister said the borders must be protected and migration stopped. Aid should be delivered to the source of the problem, he added.

The European people do not want immigration, yet certain European leaders continue to force it, Orbán said.

He thanked Poland for its help in protecting Hungary’s borders, saying that by helping Hungary, Poland demonstrated that the protection of the country’s southern border was not a Hungarian domestic issue, but rather a European one.

Cooperation between Poland and Hungary will focus on major projects such as north-south energy and transport infrastructure, he said.

Orbán described his talks with Morawiecki as “excellent”.

The prime minister said 2018 would be an important year for Europe, “the year of great debates”.

Orbán noted that 2018 would be the last full calendar year ahead of the next European parliamentary election. This is why, Orbán said, many in Europe see 2018 as the last opportunity to turn the bloc into a collection of “immigrant countries”. He said the matter would be discussed at the European Council meeting in March.

As regards the “spiritual dimensions” of migration, Orbán said he believed it was inconceivable that Hungary would ever “enter a post-Christian or post-national era”.

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