Russia

Hungarian minister confident about Paks nuclear power plant’s Russian upgrade

Hungarian minister confident Paks IAEA

The upgrade of the Paks nuclear power plant, a key investment to guaranteeing Hungary’s energy security, environmental protection and competitiveness, is progressing on schedule, the minister of foreign affairs and trade said in Vienna on Monday.

Speaking ahead of a meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Péter Szijjártó said the production of nuclear energy was “mired in political and ideological debate”. A professional approach is long overdue, he added. “Nuclear energy is the solution to safely producing large quantities of electricity at competitive prices while protecting the environment,” he said. The Paks upgrade will prevent the emission of 17 million tonnes of carbon dioxide annually, he said.

Hungary say no to sanctions

In Vienna, Szijjártó met Rosatom CEO Alexey Likhachev and reviewed the progress of the upgrade with him. Digging is under way in the place of the new blocks, he said, adding “we will be able to connect the two new reactors to the network by 2030.” Hungary is in constant contact with Rosatom on the investment. “I told them that we had reports on certain European Union member states keeping sanctions against the nuclear industry on the agenda,” he said. “That would be going against Hungarian national interests, and we will naturally veto such a proposal, should it ever be tabled … The Paks project remains an international project, with US, German and French companies involved besides Rosatom,” Szijjártó said.

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Meeting with Rosatom’s CEO:

Hungary preparation for EU presidency ‘going well’

Preparations for Hungary’s EU presidency in the second half of 2024 are progressing very well, a state secretary of the ministry for EU affairs said in Parliament on Monday. Speaking before parliament’s committee for EU affairs, Barna Pál Zsigmond listed the priorities defined for the presidency. “The most important task is to represent the interests of the European Union as a whole,” he said, adding that an EU institutional reform and most likely the war would also be among the top priorities. Hungary will take over the rotating presidency in July, short after the European Parliament elections when “the old institutions” would still be operating while new ones were being set up, he said.

The state secretary said that other priorities included boosting the EU’s competitiveness, tackling demographic challenges, moving forward the enlargement process with special focus on the Western Balkans countries, combatting illegal migration and protecting the bloc’s borders. Strengthening the community’s defence policy and continuing its cohesion policy will also be important priorities, he said.

Rosatom head: All obstacles to Paks II construction removed, Lavrov guaranteed energy security

Russia Paks nuclear power plant

With all preparatory work completed and permits obtained over the past years, there are no obstacles standing in the way of the expansion of the Paks nuclear power plant, Rosatom CEO Alexey Likhachev said at the site which he visited together with Hungarian Foreign Ministry State Secretary Levente Magyar on Friday.

At a press conference, Magyar said that the two new blocks had to be built in order to ensure Hungary’s continued energy security and sovereignty. Likhachev told the press conference that now all conditions were in place for the construction to go according to schedule. Rosatom will fulfill all its contractual obligations in the project, he said.

Paks II will be the first nuclear facility Rosatom is building in the European Union, he said, underlining that the company would use an absolutely safe technology and best practices. He said they would speed up construction which currently works with 140 Hungarian suppliers. The number of employees will continue to increase and reach around 2,000 next year, said Likhachev. Magyar said the construction was progressing well. He called the Paks II project irreversible, insisting that it would be implemented despite and attempts seeking to thwart it.

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Szijjártó: Russian FM pledged to guarantee Hungary energy supply

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov pledged to guarantee Hungary’s energy supplies, so the delivery of gas, crude oil and nuclear fuel from Russia will be uninterrupted, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said after talks with his Russian counterpart in New York on Friday. Szijjártó met Lavrov on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session. “If other Western politicians did the same, the hope for peace in Ukraine would be greater,” he said, according to the foreign ministry’s statement.

The talks focused mainly on the war in Ukraine, and Szijjártó said he reiterated to Lavrov that Hungary had a vested interest in a swift end to the war. “I told him that we Hungarians were also losing lives in this war, and so we urge an immediate ceasefire and peace talks,” he said. “My colleague, Sergei Lavrov, also said Russia was ready for peace negotiations. There are obviously a lot of details to clarify. I do hope that at some point, circumstances will make it clear for Russia as well as for Ukraine that they have to seek the solution at the negotiating table,” Szijjártó said. Another topic of the talks was bilateral energy cooperation, he said. Lavrov said Russia would fulfil its contractual obligations, Szijjártó said.

Russia will deliver the promised amount of natural gas, crude oil and nuclear fuel by the contractual deadlines, “we can rest easy regarding Hungary’s energy supplies”, Szijjártó said. Regarding the upgrade of Hungary’s Paks nuclear plant led by Russia’s Rosatom, Szijjártó said the construction was on time for the two new blocks to be “hopefully” operational by 2030. This year, Russia has already delivered 3.3 million tonnes of crude oil and 4.2 billion cubic metres of natural gas to Hungary, he said.

The ministers said that Russia and Hungary both had an interest in maintaining the operation of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), as the only remaining forum for East-West dialogue. Szijjártó said they also touched on the issue of new Russian textbooks. “I told Sergei Lavrov that the 1956 revolution is one of the most uplifting events of Hungarian history when Hungarians turned into heroes as they stood up for the freedom and sovereignty of their homeland … which is why branding those people fascists is unacceptable for us…”

Lavrov assured Szijjártó that the issue would be handled according to President Vladimir Putin’s latest statement, the Hungarian minister said. Szijjártó and Lavrov also discussed maintaining economic cooperation in sectors not hit by sanctions.

Foreign minister in talks with Russian, Turkic leaders

Hungarian foreign minister Péter Szijjártó and Russian Sergei Lavrov

Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó is scheduled to meet his Russian and Iranian counterparts, as well as the foreign ministers of the Organization of Turkic States, on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

At a working breakfast, Szijjártó said his Azeri counterpart would give an outline of the developments in Nagorno-Karabakh, where he said Armenian troops were expected to be withdrawn under an agreement, presenting a “good chance of peace in the region”. Szijjártó welcomed the news, saying “if the many armed conflicts in the world connect, that would threaten with a global war, maybe even the third world war.”

Meanwhile, Szijjártó said “several pieces of fake news” had been published regarding a joint European Union declaration on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict on Thursday. “The truth is that Hungary and other member states have also made proposals regarding the statement, but there was no consensus, so the High Representative [of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy] published it in his own name.”

“Hungary’s stance is clear on this issue too: we need peace rather than war, it’s time that the suffering of the people of Karabakh finally ended … Those unilateral statements don’t help, but the UN would be an excellent forum for personal meetings,” he said. In talks with his Turkish colleague, Szijjártó said they would review bilateral energy cooperation, including nuclear cooperation and the purchase agreement of natural gas. Szijjártó will also meet his Iranian counterpart. “Whenever Iran is ousted from the international community and the circle of reliable partners, that always prompts uncertainty in the Middle East, raising the spectre of another security risk or armed conflict,” he said. “We promote dialogue here, too,” he said. Hungary is a member of a programme of the International Atomic Energy Agency aimed at the peaceful use of Iranian nuclear capacities, he said.

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Meeting with Lavrov

Szijjártó is also slated to meet Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, and discuss with him the prerequisites of restoring peace in the region.

“We want the killing to stop. We don’t want any more people to die and for peace talks to start as soon as possible, after a ceasefire,” he said. War is harming “everyone, but especially Europe, where everyone is paying the price of war, including Hungarians who have no part in it,” he said. “In talks with other foreign ministers in the world, I have seen that the world has had enough of the war. Everyone wants peace,” Szijjártó said.

Hungary, Moldova archives sign cooperation agreement

ABTL

The Historical Archives of the Hungarian State Security Services (ABTL) and the National Archives Agency of the Republic of Moldova (ANA) signed a cooperation agreement on document exchange in Budapest on Wednesday.

ABTL director Gergő Bendegúz Cseh said after the signing event that the Hungarian agency would make available documents with content on Russia to ANA under the agreement. In exchange, ABTL will receive copies of documents concerning Hungarian citizens and victims with Hungarian nationality, he added.

Hungarian State Security document files are incomplete but archives in many neighbouring countries and Russia store many documents on Hungarian citizens or Hungarians beyond the borders, he said.

Previously, agreements were signed with archives in Romania, Ukraine, and Russia.

Preliminary research showed that many documents are available in the Moldovan archives about thousands of Hungarians who were deported or taken prisoners of war in 1944-45.

Hungarian foreign minister meets his Russian counterpart again: for peace

lavrov_szijjártó_foreign_minister_moscow

The world should take the 78th United Nations General Assembly as an opportunity to broker peace in Ukraine, but that would require dialogue between the parties, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said in New York on Monday.

Regarding a meeting of European Union foreign ministers scheduled on occasion of the General Assembly, Szijjártó said that in all likelihood his colleagues would “warn everyone against meeting and talking to representatives of the Russian government”. “I think that’s going in the wrong direction,” he said. “The UN was founded so that even warring parties could at least talk to each other, because that raises the hope of a solution taking shape, or at least things not getting worse,” he said.

The UNGA, to be attended by Ukraine, Russia and “everyone else”, “would be an opportunity for everyone to talk to each other on neutral territory,” he said. Szijjártó said he was scheduled to meet his Russian counterpart in the second half of the week, “and I think that the best course of action would be if as many of my Western colleagues as possible would do the same.” Meanwhile, the minister welcomed a meeting of the Visegrád Group on closer cooperation. “Our views on and approach to peace are clearly different, but there is a multitude of other matters we agree on, on which cooperation is in the nation’s interest.”

Read also:

  • Secret organisation recruits volunteers in Hungary to fight for Russia in Ukraine – Read more HERE
  • Putin apologised to Hungary while Orbán talked about 50 pc chance of a Huxit

Humanity “may be closer to the third world war than ever”

Later on Monday, Szijjártó is scheduled to attend a meeting of the World Economic Forum. Regarding the meeting, he said the “war psychosis” resulting from the war in Ukraine had created a political climate that could lead to blocs forming anew in world politics. “We want the coming years to be about connectivity,” he said. He said that after the ties between Russia and Europe had been severed “one by one”, there were western European attempts to do the same with China. “That would have tragic consequences,” he warned.

Meanwhile, western car manufacturers are dependent on Eastern suppliers in the transition to electromobility, he said. Hungary has successfully become an important meeting point for the sector’s investments, he added. “We have an interest in developing civilised cooperation between East and West,” he said. At the same time, the security situation had deteriorated worldwide, he said. Humanity “may be closer to the third world war than ever,” he said, adding there were 50 armed conflicts happening simultaneously worldwide.

Szijjarto said instability in the Middle East had a direct impact on Europe, contributing to rising migration pressure. The Abraham Accords, he said, were the first successful attempt in the past few decades to broker peace between Israel and several Arab countries, and he called for a push to expand the accords, saying that Hungary was ready to contribute as it saw Israel as a strategic partner and had friendly relations with many Arab countries.

PHOTOS, VIDEO: The last Hungarian WWII POW got home in 2000!

András Toma WWII POW homecoming

András Toma, the last Hungarian WWII prisoner of war spent 53 years forgotten in a mental hospital in far-off Russia. He only returned home to Hungary on the 11th of August in 2000. Here is his story:

His captivity after WWII

As Blikk wrote, András Toma was conscripted in 1944 at the age of 19. As a soldier of the Hungarian army, he was captured somewhere between Auschwitz and Krakow in January 1945. The young man was then transferred to the POW camp at Boksitogorsk near Leningrad. After that, he was transferred to Bistrica, 1500 km to the east, in the spring of 1945. In 1947, the warrior with nerves shattered by the inhuman conditions and the awful journey was sent to the Kotelnych mental hospital. It was located 800 km from Moscow, and András Toma spent 53 long years at the institution.

Following Soviet practice, once the man had passed through the gates of the psychiatric institution, his name was removed from the POW list. Therefore, it did not strike the Hungarian authorities that he did not return home even after the easing of the situation after the end of WWII.

Toma András hospital
Source: Youtube / Laszlo Erdos

How he got home

Toma had not learned Russian in his fifty years of captivity. He would presumably have died in a Russian institution if a Slovak doctor had not noticed him. The doctor got suspicious as he only spoke Hungarian and was registered at the psychiatric clinic under the wrong name, András Tamás. Later, Toma attracted the attention of the Russian and then the Hungarian press, as well as the Hungarian authorities. The authorities sent András Veér, neurologist and psychiatrist, who officially confirmed that the elderly man was without doubt Hungarian. He finally returned home on the 11th of August in 2000.

Toma András homecoming
Source: Youtube / Laszlo Erdos
Toma András WWII POW homecoming
Source: Youtube / Laszlo Erdos
András Toma POW homecoming
Source: Youtube / Laszlo Erdos

After his return

After his return, at a Hungarian psychiatric clinic, it was found that his mental illness could be treated with medication. In addition, he was given a new artificial leg, which was 1.5 kilos lighter than the old Soviet one. Researchers found out that the elderly man was from Sulyánbokor, near Nyíregyháza. He was then taken to the village to meet the family that was believed to be his. Later, DNA tests confirmed the family links. The family documents revealed that András Toma was already suffering from mental illness at the front. He even had the opportunity to visit his old school and meet his classmates who were still alive.

András Toma and Hungarian star journalist Vujity Tvrtko:

Compensation

After his return, Toma was promoted to reserve sergeant major by the Minister of Defence for his decades of service. He also received his salary from the past years, which eventually amounted to several million forints, as his service was considered continuous during his time in the psychiatric hospital. However, the family was not satisfied with the compensation. The elderly man spent four years with his family after his return. His sister, Anna, cared for him until he died in 2004.

Here is a video of the inauguration of his memorial:

As you can see and hear in the video, the old warrior could still sing the Hungarian Appeal (Szózat) even after over 50 years of Russian captivity!

If you are interested in history, you might also want to read the following articles:

Hungary taking in Polish WW2 refugees commemorated in Warsaw

A commemoration was held in Warsaw on Monday, marking the 84th anniversary of Hungary opening its borders to Polish refugees at the beginning of the Second World War. The event was held at the memorial of Jozsef Antall Sr and Henryk Slawik, who organised the rescue effort, and attended by Orsolya Zsuzsanna Kovacs, Hungary’s Ambassador to Poland, and Jan Józef Kasprzyk, the head of the Polish office of war veterans and those persecuted in war. Polish Speaker of the House Elzbieta Witek sent a letter greeting the participants.

In his speech, Kasprzyk noted that in September 1939, Hungary opened its borders to Polish refugees displaced by German and Soviet aggression. He called Antall and Slawik heroes of the Polish, Hungarian and Jewish people. “Those two men showed that we must preserve our humanity and love for our brethren even in the hardest of times,” he said.

MEP Gyöngyösi on Russia’s fasification of history

Soviet tank in Budapest, Hungary
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MEP Márton Gyöngyösi’s (Non-attached) thoughts via press release:

Viktor Orbán’s and Péter Szíjjártó’s relationship with Vladimir Putin and Sergey Lavrov is just as consensual as Leonid Brezhnev’s famous kiss on János Kádár’s lips – says Márton Gyöngyösi, reflecting on the Russian history textbook that stigmatizes Hungary’s 1956 revolution as a fascist act, and the current Hungarian diplomacy’s failure to properly react. Besides the problem above, Jobbik’s President sees even more grave and general troubles in the story. Válasz Online has already confronted Márton Gyöngyösi with his earlier pro-Russia stance, but since the MEP responded to István Kollai’s article published by the magazine, we are giving him the floor. Opinion

Válasz Online has recently published István Kollai’s piece – as a response to one of the most “destructive” Magyar Nemzet articles in the past few years. I believe every adult Hungarian citizen is responsible for the state of Hungary’s public discourse, so I thought it was important for me to respond, not as a politician but as a Hungarian citizen. Consequently, I am not going to address partisan political issues in this article. Instead, I am going to focus on the objective truth and the issues that should have the same meaning for everyone. Except for those who think that the partisan view is the only possible view on life…

“History is the teacher of life” and “those who forget their history are condemned to repeat it” – many wise quotes address the importance of how we, both as individuals and groups, must be aware of the acts committed by our ancestors. No surprise there: our intention to systematically record our past is as old as the first human civilization.

Of course, the way how people transferred their knowledge of past events and how they presented them to the next generations has changed a lot over time. From the minstrels and folk ballads of bygone eras, we have gotten to the modern historical science which relies on several ancillary sciences to understand and systematically record what happened to humans. Throughout all those centuries however, the ultimate goal remained the same: to remember the glorious deeds and the catastrophic failures as well as to learn from success and disaster alike.

With the ever-faster flow of information, we have had more and more opportunities to widen our scope with new aspects and understand how the success of a particular group may be viewed completely differently by another.

This kind of knowledge enables and requires us to integrate the experiences of other groups into our own, thus building us and helping us to understand what happened.

“History is always somebody’s opinion”, says the pessimistic adage, and not always without merit. Ever since the existence of monarchs and political agendas, the study of history has always been accompanied by an effort to subjugate it to ideological or even partisan goals. Beside ruling the present and the future, decision makers and their minions thought they had to rule the past as well, even if it meant that they had to completely rewrite interpretation frames in order to straighten out the detours of the ruling logic.

In addition to the chronological and systematic recording of events, the study of history has always involved passing judgements and drawing conclusions. This is completely natural. What is not natural however, is the distortion of actual facts in an effort to draw the “appropriate conclusion”. This is something that must immediately be rejected by all who love history. I am not suggesting that debates about the evaluation of an era, which can offer new aspects to enrich our knowledge, are unwanted or without merit. What I am suggesting is that meaningful debates cannot be conducted unless the facts are fully respected by everyone, and the participants of the debate not only listen to the other party’s arguments but try to understand them as well.

What is presented in the Russian textbook is nothing but a falsification of history.

To call the participants of Hungary’s 1956 revolution fascists and arrow-cross members or to state that the uprising was driven by Western secret services is not just offensive to Hungarians. It is an objective lie, too. As a lie, it is also a political attack on universal science, which has very clear records and evidence of the reasons and events of the 1956 revolution in Hungary, just like we have very clear and properly researched knowledge of the reasons and manner of the Soviet withdrawal in 1991. These are not opinions; they are hard facts that have just been distorted and falsified by Russia to provide moral grounds for the Soviet Union’s rehabilitation in line with the momentary interests of the current leadership. We are talking about the Soviet Union that was a murderous, genocidal regime, not just according to the moral norms of 2023 or the opinions of some western countries. It was responsible for the death and misery of tens of millions of people.

Since it also affected Hungary, all reasonable Hungarian people rightfully expected their government to contact Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and protest against not only the offensive statements, but the falsification of history, too.

But it never happened. Despite how bravely the Fidesz government summons ambassadors and how fervently it reacts to criticism, the Hungarian foreign ministry kept silent this time. The Prime Minister, who never misses out on using the word “sovereignty” when he claps back at critics, failed to speak up, too. Finally, Fidesz’ leading figure in cultural policy Szilárd Demeter was able to produce a reaction saying he was upset by this “point of view”, but it was an understandable Soviet interpretation of the events. After that, state secretary of foreign affairs Tamás Menczer added that they would rather not address the matter.

The embarrassing silence and the trivialization by lower-ranking officials reveal two things. The first one is the true nature of the Orbán government’s relationship with Russia. Back in Hungary, the government tries to explain away its Russia relations (which estranged it from the whole of Europe, by the way) saying we are a sovereign country that builds relations on an equal basis just like such powers as Germany and France do, but the reality is that Viktor Orbán’s and Péter Szíjjártó’s relationship with Vladimir Putin and Sergey Lavrov is just as consensual as Leonid Brezhnev’s famous kiss on János Kádár’s lips. (Just in case you don’t know the background: Kádár was always terrified of Comrade Brezhnev’s greetings to his mouth, but the Soviet comrades never asked him about it, and he thought he had better not complain.) Now, decades later, the Hungary-Russia relations are so unequal again that the Hungarian foreign minister thinks he had better not raise these issues at all. So much about sovereignty…

The other issue is the cultural aspect. Although Fidesz doesn’t necessarily agree with the concrete statement about the freedom fighters of 1956, it very much agrees with ideologically driven falsifications of history or the idea of using history for propaganda purposes. This is where Fidesz’ true attitude toward European conservatism is clearly shown. We, the people on the right were justifiably appalled by the Marxist interpretation of Hungarian history and rightfully despised the falsification of history committed by the Socialist regime, as they refused to see and emphasize anything in our nation’s past other than fundamental losses and historical crimes.

In the meantime, many people, myself included, thought that the best response to the left’s lies and distortions of history is to view events objectively. In contrast, Fidesz believed the best solution was to rewrite Hungarian history to make it more “jingoistic”, not refraining from massaging the facts or, if need be, to completely misinterpret and falsify events.

When the leading government propaganda outlet releases an article that present the 1968 occupation of Czechoslovakia as the continuation of Hungarian territorial revisionism, explaining that we must interpret history from a special “Hungarian point of view”, and printing such concrete lies that Communist dictator Kádár’s Hungarian occupying troops arrived in Czechoslovakia as liberators and were greeted as such by the local Hungarian population, it certainly must be hard for the government to find the moral ground to condemn Russia’s falsification of history. Back in 1968, the commanders of the Socialist Hungarian army took particular care to make sure that none of the soldiers could assume any similarity to the events of 1938, and the local Hungarian population was not at all happy to see this army that was much more Socialist than Hungarian, both in spirit and in actions. These are the facts of history.

Now you can easily realize why Szilárd Demeter, while personally unable to identify with the “Soviet interpretation” of 1956, finds it understandable.

What you see here in action is the method used by authoritarian regimes to create their own interpretations (lies) about history in order to construct their own mythology and support their ideology’s occasionally creaking pillars with all those “historical lessons”.

Indeed, it would be very strange if Hungary’s ruling party tried to blame Putin for something that Fidesz also does to Hungarian history.

This mentality is typical of Nazism and Bolshevism, and has nothing to do with conservatism, but this is not even the biggest trouble with it. This should be a problem for Fidesz members who claim to be conservatives or the voters who cast their ballot for Fidesz because they saw all kinds of Christian and civil virtues in Antal Rogán’s political products. Even more importantly, this mentality is nothing but intellectual well poisoning, in other words, the prevention of future generations from being able to draw their own conclusions by studying their real history. This mentality prevents us from learning the lessons from our failures and falls, but it also falsifies and corrupts our happiness about the elevating chapters of our history, of which we Hungarians fortunately have quite enough not to have to make up and write new ones that never existed.

The biggest and universal problem is that this mentality sidelines history as a science. If we allow ideologues to parrot that history is nothing but an opinion and the most partisan science, and to use it as a pretext to deliberately misinterpret and falsify facts, then there’s no need for anyone to study history at all. We can throw the entire history of Hungary out of the window, too, and write a new one where we come from the star Sirius, Hungarian is the original language of mankind, we can win the battle of Mohács, Rákóczi can conquer the world and Kossuth can establish the Danube Republic.

If enough nations put sufficient effort into this “project” for decades, slowly but surely, we can get back to the age of overflowing national romanticism and start waging wars on national basis, trying to reclaim what we lost. Each their own. It will be great, won’t it? No. Remember: “those who forget their history…”

Disclaimer: the sole liability for the opinions stated rests with the author(s). These opinions do not necessarily reflect the official position of the European Parliament.

President Novák: Hungary is the Mecca of family-focused thinking

Hungarian President Katalin Novák

Hungary is today “the Mecca” of family-focused policies, the place to gather for discussing family-related matters together, President Katalin Novák told commercial broadcaster Inforadio late on Tuesday.

Speaking about this week’s Budapest International Demographic Summit, Novák noted that it had been organised biannually since 2015. The summit to be held on 14-15 September will this time be attended by heads of state and government as well as leaders of the main churches.

In connection with family affairs, the president highlighted the importance of family-centred thinking, discussions about families and a family-focused life in addition to financial incentives.

Novák also spoke about the Russia-Ukraine war, the situation of ethnic Hungarians in Ukraine’s Transcarpathia region and her diplomatic work.

In connection with the war in Ukraine, the president said she would welcome “earnest, open talks” behind closed doors. Novák said it would be helpful to have the opportunity to talk at meetings with the leaders of states or governments “in a lot more informal terms” about possibilities regarding the war, and about the ways and limits of providing support without getting involved in it.

She noted “a setback” as regards the rights of ethnic Hungarians in Transcarpathia, adding that she had personally called the attention of the Ukrainian president to the issue during her visit.

Speaking about her diplomatic activities, Novák said she had intentionally paid her first official visit as new president to Warsaw. She said she nurtured a good personal relationship with President Andrzej Duda which she said she believed “could help Hungary a lot”.

The president highlighted her goal “to make the negative image formed intentionally about Hungary more realistic”. Novák said she would seize every opportunity to meet local Hungarian communities, even if small in size, during every visit paid to a far-flung country.

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Government kicks out the Russians from the Paks nuclear fuel business?

fuel_rods_reactor_paks_nuclear_power_plant

Energy Minister Csaba Lantos on Tuesday signed a memorandum of understanding with the CEO of French nuclear industry giant Framatome, with an aim to step up and expand cooperation in the peaceful use of nuclear energy, the ministry has said.

While the first agreement between the government and the Hungarian branch of Framatome in 2021 focused on training and R+D, Tuesday’s agreement signed by Lantos and the parent company’s CEO Bernard Fontana included cooperation on prolonging the lifespan of nuclear plants and fuel supplies, the ministry said in a statement.

Climate friendly, sustainable nuclear energy plays a great role in Hungary’s energy mix and in fulfilling its climate protection goals, the ministry cited Lantos as saying. France, and Framatome, are also key to Hungary’s efforts to promote cooperation among European Union member states in using nuclear energy, he said. It has a large role in maintaining European energy sovereignty and competitiveness, he said.

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Putin apologised to Hungary while Orbán talked about 50 pc chance of a Huxit

Putin Hungary

PM Viktor Orbán touched some important topics at the Kötcse symposium last Sunday. His keynote speech aimed at setting the direction of his political movement; and since it is not recorded, information about what the prime minister was actually talking about emerged slowly. Now, one of his supporters said that Orbán believes there is a 50% chance that the EU will collapse. Meanwhile, President Putin made a grand gesture towards Hungary and the Czech Republic.

According to ATV, politologist Tamás Fricz dessected Orbán’s speech on Hír TV, a government-close television channel. He said Orbán reckons the EU has a fifty-fifty chance of surviving or collapsing. Orbán added that Hungary must be prepared for both two scenarios. The prime minister held his talks behind closed doors, in which he also mentioned his plan of remaining in power until 2034.

Putin: it was a mistake to send tanks to Hungary

Meanwhile, Russian President Putin said “that the Soviet Union’s decision to send tanks into Hungary and Czechoslovakia to crush mass protests during the Cold War was a mistake”, Reuters wrote. “It is not right to do anything in foreign policy that harms the interests of other peoples”, he added. But he did not go on about his decision to send troops to Ukraine.

Read also:

That comes after the scandal concerning the new history textbooks issued in Russia, which label the Hungarian anti-Communist freedom fight of 1956 as a fascist rebellion. Furthermore, the educational materials also mention that Putin deemed it a mistake that the Soviet Union withdrew its troops from Central Europe, including Hungary. We wrote about that HERE.

Ukraine’s gesture

Ukraine’s minister responsible for the country’s EU accession said Kyiv was ready to provide minority and education rights to the ethnic Romanians and Hungarians. Therefore, multilateral talks started moving towards a possible compromise, which would satisfy all three parties, 444.hu wrote. That comes after President Katalin Novák and Zelensky’s meeting in Ukraine, during which the Ukrainian President promised to solve the minority issues.

Ukraine wants to join the EU, but securing the necessary language use or education rights for the national minorities is a prerequisite. Olha Stefanisina cleared that Ukraine would not grant the same minority rights to the Russians but the country is open to make amends for Romanians and Hungarians. PM Orbán blocks EU-Ukraine accession summits because of the previously mentioned anti-Hungarian measures. We wrote about the latest one HERE. Critics believe Orbán would not support Ukraine’s EU accession even if the minority and education problems were solved as they are just excuses to veto Ukraine’s attempts to be part of the union.

Budapest to host Three Seas summit in 2025

three seas initiative summit

Hungary will be the host country of the summit and business forum of the Three Seas Initiative (3SI) in 2025, President Katalin Novák said in Bucharest on Wednesday.

Addressing this year’s 3SI summit, Novák called the region’s economic cooperation important despite the fact that a focus was currently on the war in Ukraine. She welcomed the adoption of a joint declaration and its provisions concerning Ukraine.

Novák noted the two visits she paid to Kyiv in the past twelve months and reiterated Hungary’s support for Ukraine’s territorial integrity. Hungary condemns the Russian aggression against that country and considers peace the most important goal to be achieved, she said.

Novák’s Facebook post and photos from the summit in Bucharest:

Speaking about the 3SI initiative, she noted that it had been launched with the aim to enhance economic relations and promote effective connections within the region it covers.

She welcomed Greece’s joining the 3SI while highlighting the importance of promoting the Western Balkan countries through the initiative. She said she would welcome for the initiative to gradually open towards the region’s six countries.

The Hungarian president called attention to the importance of population growth which she said was essential to boosting competitiveness.

Under the declaration adopted at the summit, Greece has been included in the 3SI.

On the summit’s sidelines, Novák held bilateral talks with Gitanas Nauseda, the president of Lithuania which will host the 3SI summit in 2024.

Novák also held talks with Hunor Kelemen, head of Romania’s ethnic Hungarian party RMDSZ.

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FM Szijjártó: Unfair to accuse Hungary of being pro-Russian

péter szijjártó in karpacz poland

It is unfair to accuse Hungary of being pro-Russian, the foreign minister said on Wednesday, adding that no one could lecture Hungary on history and freedom because Hungarians knew full well what it was like to live under oppression “unlike those who haven’t experienced this”.

Addressing a panel discussion on the future of the Visegrád cooperation at the Economic Forum in Karpacz, in Poland, Szijjártó expressed criticism of those who he said accused Hungary of being “pro-Russia” and “Putin-friendly”, saying: “I don’t have to explain it here in Poland to the Polish that perception does not always equal reality.”

Hungary had to fight for its freedom and received no help in 1956 despite Radio Free Europe announcing at the time that the country would get support from the United States.

The ones trying to lecture Hungary on history, freedom, the Soviet Union and communist oppression today are those who never experienced it, the minister said.

He said it was unfair to accuse Hungary of being “pro-Russian”, arguing that it was the physical reality and the existing infrastructure that determined Hungary’s energy supply, and the European Union was not doing anything the develop alternative delivery routes.

“Okay, I’ll cut the gas contract with Russia, fine, we don’t buy the gas from Russia. And then what happens tomorrow?” Szijjártó said. “Who will explain it to the Hungarian people?” “The same with the nuclear … fine, we’ll cut the contract with Russia, no problem. Who is the one to stand here and say that I’ll replace these 2,400MW for you, same price, same schedule?” he said.

Hungary’s government is working to diversify its natural gas resources, but the capacity of the energy infrastructure in southeast Europe is very limited and the EU does not want to finance its development, Szijjártó said.

Similarly, 85% of Hungary’s oil consumption is covered from Russian sources, but the Croatian authorities have increased the transit fee five-fold via the Trans Adriatic Pipeline, the only alternative route, and no one in Europe is protesting this, he added.

Meanwhile, Szijjártó said the United States had purchased twice as much uranium from Russia in the first half of this year as during the whole of last year.

On the subject of the Visegrád Four cooperation, Szijjártó said the grouping was still a strategic focus of Hungarian foreign policy, as the central European countries had a better chance of overcoming difficult circumstances if they were united.

The Visegrád cooperation has made achievements in recent years that have served the interests of not just Czechia, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia, but the whole of Europe, he said.

Szijjártó argued that if the four countries had not presented a united front against Europe’s planned mandatory migrant quotas, the continent would be full of illegal migrants waiting to be distributed.

He also noted that the Czech, Polish and Hungarian militaries were cooperating in policing Slovakia’s airspace and that the other three countries had assisted Hungary with its border protection efforts when migration pressure peaked.

The V4 have also contributed significantly to getting enlargement on the EU’s agenda, he said, arguing that they were united in their support for the EU integration of the Western Balkan countries, unlike several western European leaders, who he said only supported it in public.

Given that the V4 comprises four sovereign countries, they will never be in 100% agreement on the various issues, and it is natural to have “ups and downs” in relations due to disagreements, Szijjártó said, adding, however, that the countries had always been capable of separating these disagreements from other aspects of their cooperation on which they were united.

Concerning the V4’s economic weight, he said the combined GDP of the four countries would put them in 14th place in the global ranking, adding that trade between Germany and the V4 was double the trade volume between Germany and France.

Szijjártó welcomed that the current Czech V4 presidency sought to focus on practical accomplishments, pointing out that central Europe would be willing to purchase natural gas from Qatar, Azerbaijan, Türkiye, though the southeast European energy infrastructure did not have the capacity for this and needed to be developed.

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Hungarian FM: It is a realistic goal to build Paks II by 2030

Paks nuclear power plant

The expansion of Hungary’s Paks nuclear power plant has reached a new milestone with groundwork under the planned number six block now under way, and the 2030 completion target remains realistic, Péter Szijjártó, the minister of foreign affairs and trade, said on Tuesday.

Initial groundwork is taking place at an depth of five metres, Szijjártó said, noting that this stage of the process for block number five was already complete.

Some sections of the sixth block will be up to 23 metres deep to ensure the block’s stability and safety, he said, adding that 30-40 trucks are being used to dump the soil being dug up.

Meanwhile, work on the diaphragm wall is still ongoing, with 700 metres of it already built, Szijjártó said, adding that work on the reactor storage space was under way in Russia.

“This means that the target of completing the project by 2030 remains realistic,” he said.

The expansion of the Paks power plant is vital for Hungary’s long-term energy security, the minister said, adding that the new blocks will allow Hungary to produce around 70 percent of the electricity it consumes.

FM Szijjártó: Hungary’s diplomacy under pressure

szijjártó at un new york

Hungary’s foreign policy will “stay Hungarian and sovereign,” Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó told ambassadors on Monday, adding that the Hungarian government “will not give in to any international pressure” and keep national interests in its focus.

Speaking at an annual conference for Hungarian diplomats, Szijjártó said the government’s primary focus was to ensure Hungary’s security and development amid “Europe’s gravest economic and security challenges of all times”.

Szijjártó suggested the government’s measures “will certainly run contrary to the expectations of the international liberal mainstream” and “diplomats need to be prepared to do their work under great international pressure”. “Luckily, we are used to that,” he added.

The minister said he expected “especially great pressure” in two areas. One of them is the war in Ukraine, which is “not Hungary’s war”, he said. At the same time, he added that the government condemned the war and supported Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty.

“We are not responsible and nobody could demand that we should pay the price,” he insisted. “We continue to refuse to participate (in the conflict),” he added.

Concerning Ukraine’s “seriously curbing” Hungarian education for ethnic kin, Szijjártó said that the Hungarian government had voiced its concerns but “our allies, our friends, our EU peers would not recognise the problem”.

“As long as Ukraine refuses to restore the rights of the Hungarian community, we cannot support its accession talks to be launched with the European Union,” he said.

Szijjártó also said communication channels with Russia should be kept open, “or else even the hope for peace will disappear”. Hungary will not terminate its crucial energy agreements, either, he added.

Meanwhile, Szijjártó said Hungary had become “a meeting point between western and eastern investment”. “Here again, we will face great pressure, because we are not the only country that wants those investments,” he said. Some countries in western Europe are also eyeing those projects and “they will say all kinds of things about us … they will say we must stop economic cooperation with China, naturally because they would want … to attract those projects offering jobs to many thousands and tens of thousands of people,” he said.

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Russian Embassy on textbook scandal: 1956 is a complex issue

Putin Orbán Russian gas disgraceful role

In Russia, Vladimir Putin has written a new history book on 1956, when rebellious radicals, former soldiers of fascist Hungary, took up arms and committed mass murder. The textbook concludes that the Russian withdrawal from Hungary was a mistake.

Russian embassy says no problem

“Modern Russia has an unchanging respect for the historical memory of the Hungarian people and recognises that there are complex issues in our common history, including the events of 1956. Therefore, we have always approached the issue with great caution and care, not allowing it to be used for political purposes and to examine the events of the past from today’s perspective, out of historical context,” the Russian Embassy in Budapest commented on the textbook scandal.

Eleventh-graders in Russia can learn history from a new textbook produced under the supervision of Vladimir Putin’s adviser Vladimir Medinsky. The book has several problems for Hungarians. Stalin is being rehabilitated and Putin is being portrayed as the saviour of the country, writes 444.hu.

In a Facebook post, the Russian embassy labels Meduza, who first wrote about the content of the textbook, a liar. According to them, the newspaper “specialises in the production and dissemination of anti-Russian fake news, for which it is rightly considered a foreign agent in Russia“.

Hungarians are outraged

The book has caused outrage in Hungary. Opposition parties reacted to the case and even the Foreign Ministry expressed its views.

Áron Máthé, deputy chairman of the National Remembrance Committee (NEB), told InfoRadio that what is written in the Russian history textbook is undoubtedly a falsification of history from a Hungarian point of view.

Hungarian freedom, as the 1990 Memorial Act makes clear, was born from the blood of the martyrs of 1956. “It’s like when we didn’t let go of ’48, we didn’t let go of ’56. It is such a bedrock. Our whole 20th century revolves around ’56, that’s the axis!”

The director of the Petőfi Literary Museum also finds it outrageous. “Inhuman dictatorships are still inhuman and remain dictatorships if someone starts to cosmeticise them afterwards. 1956 has already been called a counter-revolution (by Hungarians, no less), and that too was a desecration of our heroes,” said Szilárd Demeter.

“Russia still sees itself as an empire, and Central and Eastern Europe as its own sphere of interest,” said Ildikó Repárdszky, vice-president of the Association of History Teachers.

The Democratic Coalition accused the author of the textbook of falsifying history, while the president of Momentum wrote a letter to Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó, writes napi.hu.

Jobbik is also calling on the Foreign Minister to ask the Russian Ambassador to the EU. “We will not tolerate anyone talking about the 1956 revolution and its heroes in a humiliating way.”

Orbán: Trump is our only hope – Interview with Tucker Carlson

orbán carlson interview

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán gave an interview to Tucker Carlson, former Fox News anchor. The conversation focused on Russia’s war in Ukraine, the threat of a third world war, the importance of peace and former US president Donald Trump.

Sovereignty for Ukraine, but not NATO membership

Orbán called for an agreement with Russia on a new security architecture “to provide security, sovereignty for Ukraine, but not NATO membership”.

“We are living in a very dangerous moment,” he told Carlson. “So the third world war could be knocking on our door,” he added. He said “we have to be very, very careful”. “And that’s my message always to America, as well as NATO summits, be careful with that”, he added.

“If any western country would send boots on the ground, that would mean a direct war between the West and Russia,” Orbán said. “And we are in a third world war, immediately. So it’s a very dangerous moment now.” he added.

We cannot defeat Russia

He said that in the end, it is the number of soldiers on the battlefield that will count. And the Russians are much stronger in this, much more, much more than the Ukrainians, he added.

“We have to understand that we cannot beat them with the current method. It is impossible. They will not assassinate their leader. They will never give up. They will keep the country united and they will defend it,” he said of Russia and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Orbán said that the only solution is peace. If the United States wanted peace, there would be peace the next morning. If money and equipment do not come from the West, especially from the United States, the war is over, the Prime Minister said, stressing that “the solution is in your hands”.

Only the United States can do it, no one else, the Ukrainians cannot. Of course, it is all about the Ukrainians, they cannot be ignored, they must be involved, but the real factor is not Ukraine, it is the will of the United States, the Prime Minister stressed.

“Trump is the man who can save the Western world, and perhaps humanity”

“Call Trump back! This is the only way out”, Viktor Orbán said, comparing the foreign policies of Joe Biden and his predecessor and challenger Donald Trump, napi.hu writes.

He has had the best foreign policy of the last few decades. He has not started any new wars. He has handled the North Koreans and the Russians, even the Chinese, well. He has pursued a policy that has been the best possible for the Middle East, he said about Trump.

He also said that if he had been president at the moment the Russian attack started, the Russians would not have done it. “So Trump is the one who can save the Western world, and perhaps humanity on the planet. That, that is my personal belief.”

You may watch the interview below:

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Putin’s ambassador will be summoned due to anti-Hungarian textbook?

PM Orbán and Putin Russian gas

Opposition Jobbik-Conservatives has called on Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó to summon Russia’s ambassador over a textbook recently published in Russia, in which Hungary’s 1956 anti-Soviet revolution is described as a “fascist revolt”.

Jobbik deputy group leader Koloman Brenner also called on the minister to protest in a memorandum against the textbook, stating that it “echoes the ideology of communist Soviet Union”.

Brenner said the government would need to take “serious steps of distancing itself” from the textbook. This could “at last restore the equilibrium of Hungary’s foreign policy”, he added. Brenner noted that in 2016, when the Russian side referred to developments in 1956 as a “pogrom”, Szijjártó summoned the Russian ambassador.

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Putin’s new history textbook says it was a mistake to withdraw from Hungary in 1991

Putin and Orbán

Putin has a new history textbook written by his adviser Vladimir Medinsky. According to the new textbook, in 1956, rebellious radicals, former soldiers of fascist Hungary, took up arms and committed a large number of murders. The textbook concludes that it was a mistake for Russians to withdraw from Hungary.

New Russian state history book

In 1956, rebellious radicals, former soldiers of fascist Hungary, took up arms and committed many murders. According to a G7 article, this is how the new Russian state history textbook describes the 1956 revolution of Hungary. This volume will be compulsory for the education of 17-year-olds throughout the country. The volume for 11th graders was written by Vladimir Medinsky, an advisor to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

G7 notes about Medinsky that as culture minister he fired the head of the Moscow archives for questioning the historical authenticity of the filmed legend of the Great Patriotic War, the story of 28 soldiers who stopped a German tank column in front of Moscow at the cost of their lives, 24.hu writes.

It was a mistake releasing Hungary

G7 points out that the book spends almost a hundred pages on Putin’s reign and 18 pages on the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian war. In addition to the section on Hungary in 1956, it is noteworthy that the book considers the release of the Soviet satellite states, including Hungary, to be a major mistake.

As the book writes, “In 1989, the unilateral withdrawal of Soviet troops from Eastern and Central Europe began. This was a particularly ill-considered decision, because the weakening of the Soviet military presence in the Allied countries caused a rise in nationalist and anti-Soviet sentiment’.

Neo-nazism, brutal tactics in Ukraine

For example, according to the G7 article, in the sub-chapter on “Ukrainian neo-Nazism”, they discuss how, since the 1990s, generations have been “raised with anti-Russian, neo-Nazi ideals” and the Ukrainian army, following NATO orders, uses its own citizens as human shields, not allowing them to leave their homes. According to the textbook, ‘no army in the history of the world has ever used such brutal tactics on its own territory’.

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