Ukraine

Minister Gulyás: Hungary wants to stay out of Ukraine war

gulyás Strong NATO in Hungary's interest oil transit

Hungary wants to stay out of the Russia-Ukraine war and does not want to participate in the NATO mission in Ukraine either, the head of the Prime Minister’s Office said on Thursday.

Gergely Gulyás told a government press briefing that the government would make every effort to ensure that Hungarian soldiers and weaponry would not be sent to Ukraine.

The government maintains its position that the war cannot be resolved on the battlefield and NATO should focus all its efforts on activating an immediate ceasefire and starting peace talks as soon as possible, he added.

He said at Wednesday’s cabinet meeting the war situation was evaluated as having taken a more serious turn. New details revealed about NATO’s plans carried the risk of the alliance intervening directly in the war, he added.

The Government Information Centre (KTK) will send a “factual report” on war-related developments to members of the public, he added.

Gulyás: Hungary doesn’t want to participate in NATO’s mission in Ukraine

Gulyás said NATO’s Ukraine mission would involve military training and the coordination of weapon deliveries, as well as 100 billion US dollars of spending on the war in the next five years. The expectation that the war may last another five years was reason for concern in itself, he said, but the expectation that all NATO members should participate and “massive pressure” on Hungary to support the alliance’s plans were even more worrying, he said.

Gulyás said NATO may consider a member state to be under attack in the absence of an actual conflict on the ground if it were “directly threatened”. Such “moves and plans” had been mobilised, he said.

He said that at the same time Hungary, as “a loyal ally”, would work to keep NATO from at all intervening in the conflict. Failing that, Hungary would do everything in its power to stay out of any future military missions in Ukraine, he said.

Gulyás said Hungary was a loyal NATO ally and among those countries to have raised defence spending to 2 percent of GDP.

He said that at the same time “peace must be served”, and the government was developing the Hungarian armed forces with a view to guaranteeing the security of its own citizens and NATO as a whole, he said, adding that investments in defence were not about engaging “in missions that threaten to trigger a world war between nuclear powers”.

Gulyás said the alliance’s leadership was likely to work towards a compromise before its meeting in Washington, DC over the summer.

On the subject of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s current visit to Hungary, Gulyás said Xi’s decision to visit Paris and Budapest was a sign of Hungary’s growing weight in the world. He slammed international media for employing “double standards” by “painting the visit to Paris as right and that one to Budapest as wrong”.

Gulyás noted that Chinese GDP, which was 20 years ago one-fifth of the EU’s, has surpassed that of the entire bloc by now, and this showed the EU’s slipping competitiveness and China’s “enormous journey in economic growth”.

In 2004 only fifteen of the world’s largest companies were Chinese; that number grew to 135 by 2023, Gulyás said. The country single-handedly produces 18 percent of the world’s GDP, he said.

Gulyás said it was in Hungary’s interest to attract as much Chinese investment as possible.

Hungary pursues the principle of connectivity in international cooperation, and the government would like to be able to conclude mutually beneficial deals on the highest-quality products possible, he said.

While four-fifths of Hungary’s investments come from Europe, it welcomes companies from all over the world, including the US and South Korea, he said, adding that all investments that created jobs and brought capital to the country were in Hungary’s interest and contributed to growing wages here.

The government reached its economic goal for 2023 and broke “war inflation”, as inflation fell to 3.6 percent in March, Gulyás said, adding that 2024 would be the year of “re-starting the economy”.

Commenting on economic indicators for the first quarter, he said goals for 2024, too, had been fulfilled so far, “despite the war environment dampening European growth”.

GDP grew by an annual 1.7 percent in the first quarter, and by 0.8 percent quarter on quarter, putting Hungary among the fastest growing EU member states, he said. Annual growth is the third highest in the EU, while quarter-on-quarter growth is the second highest, he said.

He said forecasts were less certain as long as the war in Ukraine was still ongoing, adding, however, that the 2.5 percent growth forecast for 2024 and the 4.1 percent growth projected for next year were “realistic” despite the current circumstances.

Gulyás welcomed the incipient recovery in consumption and the increase in retail sales in the first three months of 2024, following 13 consecutive months of decline.

In the tourism sector, commercial and private accommodations registered 7.1 million guest nights in the first quarter, a 14 percent increase compared with the same period last year, with the number of foreign guests rising by 18 percent to 2.9 million, he said.

Gulyás also said more than one million more people had jobs than during the Fidesz government’s left-wing predecessor, while the minimum wage has grown 3.5-fold and the average wage 3-fold since then.

Government spokesperson Eszter Vitályos said more than 3,100 families have applied for over 83 billion forints in CSOK Plusz home purchase subsidies so far, with the applications averaging 26 million forints. More than 35 billion forints had been awarded to more than 1,400 families by the end of March, she added.

Meanwhile, she said more than 210 billion forints-worth of developments have been carried out across the country, of which 180 billion has gone towards public road upgrades.

In connection with Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit, Gulyás said China’s economy is the world’s second largest, and it had a good chance of becoming its strongest within a decade.

“China needs markets … and it is interested in having as many capital investments as possible in EU countries. Adopting an anti-China position deteriorates the EU’s competitiveness,” he said, noting that China’s economy in the past two years grew by 700 percent, as against 80 percent in the US and 30 percent in the EU.

Asked whether Chinese companies would contribute to the Paks nuclear power plant expansion, he noted that besides the Russian contractor, US, German, and French companies were involved in the project, and China was not expected to have any significant role.

Asked about the issue of freedom of speech in connection with an incident involving “Chinese people wearing red caps” who had questioned an opposition Momentum MP regarding an EU flag as well as the concealment of a Tibetan flag during the presidential visit, Gulyás said an investigation should first ascertain “if such things in fact happened”, adding that only Hungarian police had such powers in the country.

Regarding the war in Ukraine and China’s related peace plan, he said Hungary alone could not establish peace, and the US and China would have an important say. “We can encourage them to do as much as possible towards attaining an immediate ceasefire and peace,” he said, adding that “war psychosis”, led by the Polish government, was growing.

Gulyás said Prime Minister Viktor Orbán was considering whether to participate in a peace summit to be held in Switzerland in mid-June at the initiative of the Ukrainian president. He said a peace summit without both warring parties present “would have not much point”, adding that progress could not be made before the parties sat down and negotiated a ceasefire. He added that he saw no chance off Orbán and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky meeting before the European parliamentary elections.

Concerning the preconditions Ukraine must meet before joining the EU, Gulyás said the Hungarian government expected Ukraine to restore the situation prior to 2015 in respect of the ethnic Hungarian minority and the legal status of minority schools, the option to take secondary school final examinations in Hungarian, and using the Hungarian language in higher education, culture, public administration and social life without restrictions. Failing to meet those criteria, Ukraine could not make real progress in its accession talks, Gulyás added.

He said Hungary supported Ukraine as the victim of the Russian attack but not by sending weapons to the country or by contributing to “prolonging the war in any way”.

Regarding aid to Ukraine, he said graft was “a serious problem”, adding it was up to the EU to establish a system to monitor the funds sent there.

Answering a question, he said that in times of war it may be valid to seize the assets of those believed to share responsibility for the war and spend the frozen funds appropriately, but “seizing the assets of a person just because they are Russian evokes the worst of pre-second-world-war times.”

On the topic of the Iranian ex-president’s visit to the National University of Public Service, he said no government member had met the “well-known Holocaust denier”, adding that “it is not easy to ban university lectures in a free country”. The government, he noted, maintained a pro-Israel policy.

On the subject of Europe, Gulyás said that even now he would vote for Hungary to join the EU despite “bad feelings” and “worries about the EU’s operations”. “Hungary has no alternative to European cooperation and the common market, and this is true of the other countries of central Europe,” he said.

Commenting on the European Commission’s readiness to scrap the Article 7 procedure against Poland, Gulyás said Poland now had a “pro-war government which the commission considers as an ally, and which is sufficient reason to close the procedure… Rule of law issues in the EU no longer have anything to do with the law; they have become a purely political matter.”

Regarding domestic politics, Gulyás said Gergely Karácsony, the mayor of Budapest, should admit to accepting unlawful funding from abroad for his election campaign in 2019.

In connection with the Tisza Party’s entry into the Budapest municipal election campaign, Gulyás said the election rules were amended six months ago in line with the opposition’s request for a purely party list system; the change had not been made because of the Tisza Party.

Commenting on the increasing popularity of Peter Magyar’s party, he said “a wrecking derby” was taking place within the left wing, and “voters will decide which leftist party to support.” “It would be unsurprising if Tisza fielded candidates who would work in Brussels to prevent Hungarians from paying lower public utility fees,” he said. “The Hungarian left wing has always been against” the government’s scheme to keep household energy bills low.

“In the end Peter Magyar and [former Socialist PM] Ferenc Gyurcsány will form an alliance … causing a serious loss of credibility to the leftist parties.”

Gulyás said the government would increase tax breaks for families with children once the necessary resources were available. He conceded that though tax benefits for families with two children had increased by 100 percent in the previous government term, the personal income tax breaks offered “significantly less help today than when they were first introduced”. He said the government intended to increase the size of the tax breaks, “but no such decision has been made yet”.

He said the reason behind last month’s fall in the budget deficit had been a 10 percent increase in budget revenues, noting that that the government targeted a deficit of 3.7 percent of GDP in 2025 and 2.9 percent in 2026.

He said retail sales were up compared with 2023, noting that they grew by 4.2 percent in March, with food sales alone rising by 5.7 percent.

Meanwhile, Gulyás attributed the fall in the industrial output to the slowdown of the German economy, but said it had only made a dent in the “higher-than-expected growth rate”. He expressed hope that industrial output figures would improve in the future.

As regards motor fuel prices, he said Friday’s price cut would bring prices at the pump below the average prices in neighbouring countries, and expressed hope that local fuel companies would keep to their agreement with the Hungarian petroleum association (MÁSZ).

Meanwhile, Gulyás said the cabinet had not discussed lowering the price of single-day motorway vignettes to 1,000 forints.

Asked to comment on figures published by national health insurance fund NEAK which show that 47,000 Hungarians are on waiting lists for scheduled operations as against 40,000 last year, Gergely Gulyás said the government planned to discuss proposals to shorten the waiting lists.

Out of thirteen types of operations, patients currently have to wait longer than 60 days for cataract, hip and knee replacement surgery, and spinal stabilisation surgery. The goal is that no one should have to wait for operations, he said, pointing out that though there were more people on the lists this year, this did not mean that they had to wait longer. He added that the average wait time had decreased from 90-100 to 45 days.

Government spokesperson Eszter Vitályos added that when waiting lists were the longest, 43,000 patients had to wait for more than 60 days for operations, and now there were 26,000 such patients.

Meanwhile, Gulyás said the government has earmarked 63.4 billion forints for the settlement of hospital debts, “and it’s very likely that another similar decision will have to be taken his year”.

Asked if the government will give supplementary funding to the struggling Budapest University of Technology and Economics (BME), Gulyás said the financing of higher education institutions would be discussed at the next few cabinet meetings. He added that Hungary had increased government funding for higher education more than any other EU country over the last 2-3 years.

Asked to comment on the BME rector’s remarks that state-financed universities did not receive a share of these resources and were being pushed towards a new management model, Gulyás said state universities had also seen pay hikes in recent years, though not as significant as the institutions that had adopted the new management model. He added that the option of switching to the new model was open to all universities.

Asked about the court ruling suspending the environmental permit of the Samsung battery plant in Göd, near Budapest, Gergely Gulyás said the decision had to be complied with. He said the Hungarian authorities were experienced when it came to handling cases concerning the operations of battery plants, adding that the factories had to adhere to the strictest environmental protection standards.

Asked about the proposed rail shuttle service that would run to and from the Liszt Ferenc International Airport, Gulyás said Hungary needed to explore the possibilities for building a direct rail link between the airport and Budapest and accept the best offer, adding, at the same time, that speculation on any such project was “premature”.

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Orbán-Zelensky talks: Hungary supports every peace initiative – UPDATED

zelensky orbán

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán held talks with Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, by phone on Wednesday, Orbán’s press chief said.

Orbán on the phone with Zelensky

They reviewed every important component of Hungarian-Ukrainian relations, Bertalan Havasi said in a statement. The major topic of the talks was the issue of war and peace, he said.

Orbán said that Hungary is ready to contribute to every initiative and efforts that could lead to brokering peace.

The two politicians agreed that they would continue their bilateral consultations, Havasi said.

Zelensky said on social media X after the talks that he underscored Ukraine’s interest in good-neighbourly relations with Hungary, as well as in the development of cooperation in trade, energy, and logistics.

The Ukrainian president said he had “a lengthy and meaningful” call with the Hungarian prime minister and invited Orbán to participate at a peace summit to be held in Switzerland next month.

“Hungary’s position is important to us in terms of bringing peace closer and of common regional security,” the president said.

At the talks further steps towards “settling the full range of bilateral issues in a mutually beneficial manner” were also discussed, he said.

Zelensky said Ukraine’s EU integration was also discussed and he said he firmly believed that Ukraine’s swift accession would benefit both Ukraine and Hungary.

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Ukraine, Gaza, Sahel: Orbán cabinet says Hungary ‘cannot be accused of lacking solidarity’

gaza palestine solidarity

Hungary cannot be accused of lacking solidarity, as it had launched the largest humanitarian action of its history to aid Ukrainians fleeing from the war and is supporting humanitarian action in Gaza, the state secretary for aiding persecuted Christians said on Monday in Brussels.

Speaking ahead of a meeting of EU ministers responsible for international development projects, Tristan Azbej said Hungary had opened its borders to more than one million Ukrainian refugees and provided asylum for hundreds of thousands. He added that the government is providing aid for people displaced within Ukraine, too.

At the same time, Hungary rejects all types of aid that would lead to a protracted war and further loss of life, he said. Also, “we won’t allow European Union funds Hungary is entitled to land in Ukraine”, he said.

Regarding the Israel-Gaza conflict, Azbej said Hungary was providing health-care services to Palestinian refugees in Egypt and participating in humanitarian action in Gaza.

Hungary has also launched a “development and peace-building project” in the Sahel to prevent the deepening of conflicts and contribute to developments “to ensure people can make a living there rather than leaving for Europe”, he said.

During its EU presidency, Hungary will focus on preserving stability and facilitating progress in those regions.

“In the spirit of Christian solidarity, we must ensure the welfare of people in crisis regions and to find the most humane ways to prevent migration,” he said.

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Ukraine aid in limbo: Why Hungary’s veto could derail European peace efforts!

Will Hungary deliver weapons to Ukraine? Ukraine aid

The Hungarian government persists in obstructing payments from the European Peace Facility. Initially, the government cited Ukraine’s inclusion of OTP on its list of international sponsors of the conflict as justification for the veto. What’s the fate of the Ukraine aid then? 

According to Telex, despite the subsequent disappearance of the list, the government remains steadfast in its stance regarding the Ukraine aid. Foreign Minister Szijjártó now asserts that Ukraine aims to revoke approval for 14 medicines manufactured by Richter, further entrenching their position.

The European Peace Facility operates independently of the EU budget, funded by contributions from Member States. Those who have supplied Ukraine with part of their stocks can receive a 60 per cent reimbursement from this fund.

With each Member state increasing their contributions by EUR 500 Million, the total now stands at EUR 6 billion. However, disbursing payments requires unanimous agreement from their member states, and Hungary’s government has consistently blocked the release of the eighth installment.

This obstruction has persisted, resulting in Hungary’s cumulative blockage of EUR 2 billion. Notable, even if other Member States proposed additional installments, Hungary’s veto o power would extend to those as well.

The rationale for the Ukraine aid veto

Hungary’s initial rationale for the veto centred on Ukraine’s inclusion of OTP on its roster of international war sponsors. With operations in Russia and Ukraine, the bank contested this justification as unjust. Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó conditioned the lifting of the veto on OTP’s removal from the list.

Upon its removal, he insisted on a face-to-face meeting in Budapest with the compiling prosecutor’s office for assurances that the bank would not be reinstated. However, the relevance of these demands became obsolete when the list itself mysteriously vanished a few days ago.

At the foreign minister’s meeting in Luxembourg, Péter Szijjártó persisted in characterizing the situation as a witch-hunt targeting Hungarian companies. The Foreign Minister stated that:

Until we receive assurances from the Ukrainian side to cease and desist this witch-hunt against Hungarian companies operating in Ukraine, we cannot endorse such measures.

Hungary maintains its stance regarding the Ukraine aid, demanding assurances that Ukraine will refrain from similar actions in the future. Szijjártó has introduced another rationale since then concerning the Ukraine aid.

Szijjártó contends that Ukrainians aim to revoke marketing authorizations for 14 medicines distributed by Richter, emphasizing the lack of justification for such actions. He asserts that Richter has not contravened Ukrainian regulations nor violated any sanctions. Additionally, Szijjártó highlighted that Richter’s operations in Russia comply with all relevant legislation.

According to HVG, theoretically, funds exist to offset expenses borne by Member States but the reality paints a different picture of a shortfall. Péter Szijjártó attempted to assuage concerns by suggesting that individuals could still procure as many weapons as needed for Ukraine, potentially easing tensions. Up to this day, this is all we know regarding the Ukraine aid debate.

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Orbán cabinet: ‘Witch hunt’ against Hungarian companies ongoing in Ukraine

Ukraine and Hungary Cooperation

The “witch hunt” against Hungarian companies in Ukraine is ongoing as authorities were preparing to withdraw the permits of a dozen pharmaceuticals sold by Hungarian pharmaceutical company Richter, the Hungarian minister of foreign affairs and trade said on Monday.

Péter Szijjártó told a press conference on the sidelines of the EU foreign ministers’ meeting in Luxembourg that the bloc was “preparing for a world war” and putting enormous pressure on Hungary in the process. Besides the 500 million in aid to Ukraine, “which Hungary blocked”, the EU was planning to fund member states’ weapon deliveries with another 1.5 billion euros from the European Peace Facility, he said.

“Hungary’s stance is unchanged and clear: until we receive a guarantee from the Ukrainian side that they will end the witch hunt against Hungarian companies active in Ukraine — and will not restart it — we cannot contribute to such decisions,” he said.

Noting that Ukraine had earlier black-listed OTP Bank as an international sponsor of the war, Szijjártó said discrimination against Hungarian companies was unacceptable and the procedures were unfounded.

He said, “Just as the OTP issue seems to be solved,” Kyiv is preparing to withdraw permits on the sale of Richter’s 14 pharmaceuticals in the country. That procedure was similarly unfounded, he said.

“Richter has not breached any rules or sanctions in Ukraine … conducting operations in Russia does not violate any laws. The pharmaceutical industry is not in any way under sanctions.”

The minister noted that when they asked the Ukrainian government to remove OTP from the list, they were told the matter was independent of politics. Later, the government decided to scrap the list altogether, which “dented” the argument’s credibility, he said.

Szijjártó said that since it appeared that a political decision had been made rather than a professional one, the danger of a similar measure being repeated was real.

“That’s why we have asked our Ukrainian colleagues to … come to Budapest, sit down and work out a solution… So far, the Ukrainian anti-corruption agency has not responded positively to our invitation. We are still waiting for them in Budapest, our colleagues are ready, so it is not up to us whether such an agreement is reached or not,” he added.

As we wrote today, the Hungarian foreign minister thinks the EU is ‘preparing for world war’ in response to the critical military situation in Ukraine, details HERE.

New Hungarian president perfectly repeats the foreign policy guidelines of the Orbán cabinet

Hungarian president sulyok in slovenia

“Hungary won’t abandon its sovereignty” President Tamás Sulyok, declared in Brdo pri Kranju, Slovenia, on Monday, adding that the European community of independent nation states was currently guaranteed by the basic treaties.

After an informal meeting of the heads of state of the countries neighbouring Slovenia, Sulyok told a press conference that Hungary opposed federalism. This idea was increasingly encroaching on European politics, and could lead to an “enfeebling Europe”.

He said developing and politically stable central Europe, Hungary included, was a motor of the EU with its own ideas, strategies, and solutions.

The bloc, he added, was “united in diversity”, and, “respecting this principle”, this was the community that Hungary had joined.

“We hold that our various opinions on Europe unite rather than divide us, and Europe’s strength is based on dialogue,” he said, adding that Hungarians were “open to all discussions”.

Meanwhile, Sulyok said Hungary was carrying out the largest humanitarian mission in its history in Ukraine, adding that Hungary stood by Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and Hungary had condemned Russian military aggression from the outset.

But Sulyok added that any steps leading to the war’s escalation or prolongation must be avoided, and Hungary would do its utmost to ensure that the EU and NATO “do not become part of the conflict.”

Also, the president said Hungary firmly condemns the terrorist attacks of Hamas and supports Israel’s right to self-defense. Stability in the Middle East, he said, was in Europe’s interest, and the EU must play its part in quickly resolving the conflict.

On the topic of the environment, Sulyok said climate change was among “the most urgent challenges of our time,” to which Hungary attached great importance. But financially hard-pressed citizens should not have to pay the price of climate policy, and businesses should not be overburdened financially or by legal red tape.

Regarding Hungary’s upcoming EU presidency, Sulyok expressed Hungary’s commitment to EU expansion, adding that as many accession chapters should be opened up as possible during its six months at the EU helm. He noted that a summit involving the EU and Western Balkans will be held at the start of November.

Addressing the issue of criticism of Hungary, he said various EU member states had widely diverging opinions regarding their constitutional order in relation to EU laws. He added that the EU treaties upheld values, principles, and goals that were rooted in the constitutional order of member states rather than being independent of them.

The president added that common values had been clouded by “biased judgment”, and he called for a return to the original roles and powers contained in the treaties instead of pursuing political conflicts over values.

President Natasa Pirc Musar held the regional summit to mark the 20th anniversary of Slovenia’s EU membership, with Sulyok, Sergio Mattarella of Italy, Alexander Van der Bellen of Austria, and Zoran Milanovic of Croatia in attendance.

Hungarian foreign minister: EU ‘preparing for world war’ in response to critical military situation in Ukraine

ukraine world war

Decision-makers in Brussels “are preparing for a world war” in response to the deteriorating military situation in Ukraine, despite the “failure of the strategy of weapon deliveries”, the minister of foreign affairs and trade said on Monday.

Speaking on the sidelines of a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Luxembourg, Péter Szijjártó said Ukraine was increasingly on the back foot in the war against Russia, which he said had prompted a “dangerous response” in Brussels: “a desperate empty-the-warehouse approach”, where almost everyone discussed a future of weapon deliveries.

“We are talking about hundreds of thousands or millions of ammunition and weapons worth billions of euros, even though we know that strategy has failed miserably in the past few years,” he said.

“Weapon deliveries have not brought peace closer; on the contrary … weapon deliveries can only prolong the war and increase the threat of it escalating into a world war,” Szijjártó said.

Hungary has arrived at a different conclusion, to the concept that the peace efforts should be strengthened and diplomacy should take the place of weapon deliveries, he said.

“We Hungarians are ready to discuss peace plans. At the same time, we must make it clear that peace conferences can only be successful if all warring parties are at the table,” he said.

As the EU is starting to prepare the 14th sanctions package against Russia, Szijjártó said he expected pressure on Hungary to be ramped up, too. At the same time, he said previous sanctions had caused more damage to Europe than to Russia, and that European citizens had been the ones to pay the price, including Hungarians who had nothing to do with the war.

“Once again, I made it clear that no matter the pressure brought to bear, we will not support a single sanction that would have Hungarians pay the price of war.”

He said the root of the fundamental difference of opinion was that politicians “in Brussels and many other capital cities” thought of the war as their own.

“I think that is not only dangerous but also false, as Europe is not at war. Europe has not been attacked. No EU or NATO member state has been attacked,” he said.

Hungary continues to see the situation differently and prioritises staying out of the conflict, he added.

Besides, he said, the EU had been gripped by a “bidding war” as the bloc was trying to outbid the US and NATO.

Regarding the situation in the Middle East, he said a consensus was on the horizon on sanctions against Iran in response to the recent attack on Israel. He welcomed the “responsible” conduct of Arab states, and called for the maintenance of regional stability and the avoidance of conflict escalation.

Responding a question about a Hungarian-Israeli national in Hamas captivity, Szijjártó said that the hostage was — according to reports received “a few weeks ago” — still alive.

As we wrote a few days earlier, Hungarian FM Szijjártó thinks aggressor Russia should be allowed to participate in the Olympics, details HERE.

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Hungarian FM Szijjártó in important talks with head of Zelensky’s office

fm szijjártó ukraine

Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Friday that he had again spoken with the Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine Andriy Yermak by phone on the rights of the ethnic Hungarian population in Transcarpathia, in the west of Ukraine.

Szijjártó said in a post on Facebook that they were in agreement that some progress had been made over the past weeks by the bilateral working group set up to address the matter but there was still a lot of work to be done. As a result, it was agreed that the working group would meet again in the second half of next week, he added.

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Hungarian Chamber of Agriculture: EU trade deals with Ukraine putting consumers, producers at risk

Harvester Agriculture Kombájn Combine Agrár

The Hungarian Chamber of Agriculture (NAK) has called for a review of European Union regulations on the import of agricultural produce, saying that imported goods should be held to the same standards as those grown in the bloc.

Noting a recent salmonella outbreak linked to infected Ukrainian chicken in the EU and UK markets which caused “dozens of sicknesses and one death”, NAK said the EU “expects its own producers to comply with the most stringent food-safety regulations but allows infected Ukrainian chicken unfettered access” to EU markets.

The case showed that fundamental change was needed in European agricultural policy, the statement said.

The trade deals with Ukraine “are now putting consumers as well as producers at risk”, NAK said, adding that they posed an economic and food-safety risk.

Despite this, the EC recently extended exemptions to duty on Ukrainian produce, the statement added.

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PM Orbán: “we are fighting against the Soros empire”

George Soros

The most important question concerning the European Union migration and asylum package is whether those that want to come to Europe can stay in EU territory while their application is being processed or they must wait outside the EU borders until a decision is made, the Hungarian prime minister said in Brussels on Tuesday. He also said he was fighting the Soros empire.

Viktor Orbán told a public discussion held in the European Parliament with former Polish counterpart Mateusz Morawiecki, and Fabrice Leggeri, the former head of Frontex and leader of the French right-wing National Rally (RN) party’s list that as long as this question was not answered, no measures linked to migration would work.

Regardless of what proposals are made in connection with the EU’s migration package, the issue of where the applicants stay while their request is being assessed must be answered, Orbán said. “This is a red line. If this is not done, everything else remains unresolved,” he said.

“If we are not brave enough to say that everyone must stay outside the borders while a decision is being made on their application, then no matter what other decision is made, that will not work,” he added.

Euronews bought by Orbán-close company
PM Orbán in Brussels in 2018. Photo: depositphotos.com

Orbán said that if the approval of the migration package does not require unanimous support, only majority support at the vote, then the entire pact would not work and its implementation would be stymied. The European Commission has taken Hungary to the EU’s court because it considered the Hungarian migration regulations not to comply with EU law, Orbán said. “But Hungary has resisted and will continue to fight,” he added.

Fighting the Soros empire

Orbán said that “one must not forget about the Soros plan which is aimed at organising migration”. “We are fighting against an organised group which is called the Soros empire,” he added. “The Soros empire was paying civil organisations to attack Hungary’s legal system and carried out unlawful activities against Hungary,” he added.

Orbán said the way US businessman George Soros got involved demonstrated how the EU operated.

George and Alex Soros
Father and son: George and Alex Soros. Photo: FB/Alexander Soros

“This is against us and about how to change Europe; and how to get rid of Christian, conservative, national political leaders and voters, and how to make them insignificant,” he said.

Orbán said the liberals and communists were close to each other because they both liked centrally controlled bureaucratic procedures instead of believing in freedom. He said experience in central Europe showed that former communists could easily turn into liberals.

EU blackmailing member states because of migration?

Speaking about the EU’s policy, Orbán said that the past five years had been dedicated to implementing goals of the current leadership. “Green transition has failed because it has gone against economic and industrial evidences,” said Orbán. He said green transition must not be “politically motivated”, adding that if the opposite was the case, “it would destroy the competitiveness of the European economy”. “That is where we stand today,” he said.

As regards the economic impacts of the war in Ukraine, “decisions may be taken despite all good-will” on measures that could cause difficulties in the European economy “which is prevalent already in the case of farmers,” said Orbán.

Hungary migration border control
Illegal migration in Hungary. Photo: FB/Máté Kocsis

The EU should define “what it should do with the issue of the war” in order to find a solution and prevent further crises, Orbán said, adding that it should be handled separately from the issue of Ukraine’s EU integration as much as possible.

Concerning the EU’s Resilience and Recovery Facility (RRF), Orbán said that Hungary had not received “a single penny” from the funds until now, adding that the fund had become “a tool of blackmail” because of its migration policy.

He said every comprehensive initiative of the current leadership of the EU had failed and he called for the “departure” of current EU leaders in office.

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Hungarian FM Szijjártó: Russia should be allowed to participate at the Olympics

Hungarian foreign minister war in Ukraine russia

Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, told a conference on Friday that “geopolitics should have nothing to do with sports and penalising athletes for such reasons is unacceptable”, referring to the questions surrounding Russia’s participation in the 2024 Olympic Games.

Speaking at a conference dubbed Sports Science and Innovation, the minister said it was equally unacceptable to propose that “athletes of a certain nation should not be allowed to participate at the Olympic Games”. He regretted that “war psychosis” in the wake of the war in Ukraine “has now impacted areas of life which should not be, which makes the situation even more hopeless”.

“We all remember that Olympic games used to have an undisputed role of creating peace, when sometimes athletes of countries at war hugged each other … after a game or fight,” Szijjártó said. “By now, geopolitics and ideological approaches have fully permeated the world of sports,” he added.

“Proposals that the athletes of a nation should not be allowed to compete in the Olympics are a sign that we have gone very deep,” he said, adding that he himself had opposed the exclusion of Russian athletes on doping charges well before the war in Ukraine. He said he did not support doping practices but objected to the principle of collective responsibility, adding that “perpetrators must indeed be punished but all athletes of the same nation must not be stigmatised”.

Also, he said he found it humiliating if “athletes are instructed to wear white, blue, or black only when they compete … and we don’t know what music will play if they win … if we take that line, who can tell what central powers will decide and on what criteria who can participate and whose anthem will be played…”, he said, warning against using double standards.

Szijjártó suggested that the Paris Olympics should be “used as a step taken towards peace”.

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Hungary helps Ukrainian refugees

police hungary ukrainian refugees

Hungarian Interchurch Aid has helped several thousand refugees at its Budapest centre for supporting Ukrainian refugees that opened eighteen months ago, the organisation’s head said on Friday, after meeting with Transcarpathia governor Viktor Mikita.

László Lehel told public media that Mikita had been following the aid group’s activities closely, and they met regularly, while the governor had also helped appreciably when it came to such things as contacting other governors.

Since the war started more than two years ago, Hungarian Interchurch Aid has helped over 500,000 people in Ukraine and Hungary, he noted. The organisation is present in every Ukrainian county, having opened offices in several locations carrying out “the main aid activity in Ukraine”.

Mikita said his office had been working together with the aid organisation since the start of the war, carrying out successful work, including the renovation of a kindergarten and school, building maternity homes and helping refugee mothers and their children.

Some 1,300 families have received help in Budapest so far

His visit to Budapest, Mikita said, also provided an opportunity to meet Ukrainian refugees living in the Hungarian capital and to discuss past and future cooperation with the charity.

Among planned projects, he mentioned setting up sports camps for children living near the frontline in Ukraine, as well as the provision of generators, solar panels and filling stations to residents in regions affected by electricity cuts as a result of the destroyed energy network in Kharkiv County.

Zoltán Sipos, the head of the aid group’s Budapest centre, said some 1,300 families have received help in Budapest so far, including humanitarian aid and support for their integration.

Finance minister: Funds disbursed to Ukraine must be monitored

Hungary considers it important to closely monitor the utilisation of the funding disbursed to Ukraine, Finance Minister Mihály Varga said in Luxembourg on Friday. Talking to Hungarian journalists after a meeting of the council of European Union finance ministers (ECOFIN), Varga said the European Commission must strive to ensure that the 50 billion euros allocated to support Ukraine’s reconstruction and reforms would be spent in a disciplined manner and used exclusively for the purposes they were provided for by the EU.

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Fuel price drama in Hungary: Experts’ outlook & Hungarian government’s possible next move revealed

Fuel Gas Station Petrol Diesel

At the beginning of the week, reports surfaced of fuel price hikes, drawing attention as Minister of National Economy, Márton Nagy, had consultations with MOL and the Hungarian Association of Petroleum (MÁSZ) regarding these rises. An energy policy expert hinted at the possibility of the government employing robust measures in response.

According to holtankoljak.hu, the wholesale prices for petrol and diesel are set to decrease from Friday onwards. Petrol will see a reduction of 3 HUF (EUR 0.0077), while diesel will become 5 HUF (EUR 0.013) cheaper for petrol stations. Consequently, average prices from the 12th of April will stand at 641 HUF/litre (EUR 1.65/l) for 95 petrol and 653 HUF/litre (EUR 1.68/l) for diesel.

Nevertheless, there is a possibility of further price cuts being curtailed, as the wholesale price of petrol is expected to rise by 3 cents gross, while for diesel, the pump price to wholesalers will rise by 6 cents gross starting today.

According to Erste’s analysis, there might be another price cap. However, there are speculations that Minister Márton Nagy might opt for a voluntary reduction in prices. Such action could potentially yield short-term negative effects on MOL, the Hungarian oil and gas company.

MOL fuel station
Photo: FB

Experts’ reaction to fuel price changes

Looking ahead, Századvég’s energy policy expert Oliver Hortay underscores the significance of the trajectory of geopolitical conflicts. He stresses three main factors:

  • Firstly, attacks on Russian oil refineries by Ukraine and events in the Middle East are key reasons behind recent rises in oil and fuel costs. Should these conflicts escalate, it could elevate geopolitical risks, while de-escalation might temper prices.
  • Secondly, forthcoming decisions from the OPEC oil cartel will come into play. Influenced by geopolitics, alongside market fundamentals like rising prices and projected demands, there’s a growing justification for relaxing quotas, which could impact global oil prices.
  • Lastly, several remaining elements could influence Hungary’s fuel price situation. These include Russia’s efforts to resolve its price disparity with Western oil, ongoing increases in transportation expenses from countries such as Croatia and Ukraine and the volatility of the forint against the dollar.

In response to inquiries by Economx, Oliver Hortay, Századvég’s energy policy expert, notes a recent uptick in fuel prices. He links this surge not only to fluctuations in the forint exchange rates but also to the global oil price. At the beginning of 2024, one USD was 345 HUF, with Brent crude oil priced at USD 75 per barrel, while Russian Urals crude stood at USD 58 per barrel.

However, by April, the dollar rose to 360 HUF, Brent crude to USD 90 and Urals crude to over USD 80. Hortay pointed out that fuel costs are mainly dictated by worldwide oil rates, which have been rising lately because of conflicts among nations. The query arises as to how much influence a Hungarian minister holds over fuel prices amid such forceful global market dynamics and events.

Oliver Hortay suggests that the government has options to address fuel price concerns through both stringent and lenient measures. Stringent measures entail regulatory adjustments like price freezes, while lenient measures involve steering market players without regulatory alterations, as seen in the phased-in implementation of new excise duty rates.

Deciding between these approaches requires considering various factors such as interest rates, geopolitical developments and market player conduct. The forthcoming meeting between the Minister of National Economy and representatives of MOL and MÁSZ adds further complexity to the decision-making process.

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Hungary, Ukraine agree to open new border crossing

Hungary, Ukraine agree to open new border crossing

Hungary and Ukraine have signed an agreement on opening a new border crossing point between Nagyhodos in Hungary and Velyka Palad (Nagypalád) in Ukraine, the foreign minister said on Wednesday.

The new crossing station will be the sixth between the two countries, Péter Szijjártó said on Facebook.

The minister noted his phone talks last month with Andriy Yermak, head of the Ukrainian president’s office, that led to the agreement on the new border crossing as well as an agreement to allow cross-border freight traffic at Beregsurány.

The agreement on the Nagyhodos-Velyka Palad crossing point was signed this week by Oleksandr Kubrakov, Ukraine’s infrastructure minister, and Hungary’s ambassador to Kyiv, Szijjártó said.

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  • Hungary and Ukraine to sign border traffic agreement – Read more HERE
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FM Szijjártó: NATO in state of ‘war psychosis’

szijjártó brussels nato

“NATO is in a state of war psychosis, which poses a serious risk of escalation,” Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said in Brussels on Thursday, adding that NATO should switch its strategy.

“All that was said in the meeting reflected that peace is needed as soon as possible; the situation on the battlefield clearly shows that the number of casualties and destruction will dramatically increase without a rapid diplomatic settlement,” the foreign ministry quoted Szijjártó as saying after a meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council.

“Operations on the battlefield are clearly intensifying, with ever more serious consequences; all efforts should now focus on establishing peace in order to save lives and prevent further destruction,” the minister said. It was “bad news”, he added, that his position was “in minority within NATO”.

He quoted a participant in the meeting as saying that “the goal is not to achieve peace but to win the war.” “NATO is more or less characterised by that kind of war psychosis … most spoke today about how to increase weapons shipments to Ukraine,” he added.

Szijjártó said putting together such shipments was becoming more and more problematic, partly because many NATO member states “have already contributed nearly all the ammunitions in their reserves.” He noted that currently Hungary and the Czech Republic provide air policing in Slovakia because “Bratislava has given all their aircraft to Kyiv and they have not received new ones yet”.

It was also suggested that “warehouses should be emptied and all equipment handed over to Ukraine… Desperate remarks like that clearly show that mounting difficulties are an obstacle to arms shipments,” Szijjártó said. Those difficulties “are not just physical, not least because few weapons are left, but also because sending arms has proven futile in terms of the original goals,” he said.

“So far we have heard from the countries sending arms that those weapons would help Ukraine to battlefield victories … but this is not happening,” he said.

Hungary opposes boosting NATO’s coordination role in sending arms to Ukraine and training Ukrainian soldiers, “and will not participate in planning or in the activities themselves; neither will it contribute to financing,” Szijjártó said.

Szijjártó: NATO must strengthen counter-terrorism

NATO must strengthen its counter-terrorism activities with a view to ensuring unimpeded East-West trade, Szijjártó said, adding that European economic interests depended on smooth trade.

“The challenge posed by global terrorism is becoming ever more serious,” he told a press conference after a meeting of the NATO Council of Foreign Ministers, adding that terrorism threatened global security and trade, as well as East-West relations.

Hungary, he said, did not want a world “divided into blocs again”, and East-West cooperation should be as dense as possible. But connections that are key for Hungary and the Hungarian economy “are seriously threatened by terrorism in the Red Sea”, he added.

Referring to Houthi rebels operating off the shores of Yemen, Szijjártó said the terrorist organisation must not be allowed to cause “serious economic problems” for European businesses “after the economic shocks caused by the coronavirus and the war in Ukraine”.

Noting that cooperation with the Pacific region was among the topics of discussions at the meeting with representatives from Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand, he said Hungary maintained close economic cooperation with countries of the Far East. Investments from the region “contribute significantly to the growth of the Hungarian economy, so for us the smoothness of East-West trade is a key issue. So we stand for strengthening NATO’s counter-terrorism stance,” the minister concluded.

Szijjártó: Hungary-Ukraine education team ‘fails to bring positions closer’

The education working group set up by the Hungarian and Ukrainian governments “has met once again but failed to bring positions closer,” the foreign minister said on Thursday, adding that Hungary “insists that the rights Ukraine’s Hungarian minority should be fully restored.”

Speaking at a press conference after a meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council, Szijjártó said “the serious issue with Kyiv concerning the rights of the Hungarian community in Transcarpathia is still unresolved.”

“We insist that Ukraine restore rights to the Hungarian community that they had nine years ago, guaranteeing … the preservation of their Hungarian identity,” Szijjártó said, adding that they should be able use their mother tongue in educational and cultural settings, as well as in public administration and the media.

“We cannot accept less. Our Ukrainian partners are aware of that, even if they sometimes pretend not to be,” Szijjártó said, adding that the Hungarian government had consistently promoted its position in the past nine years.

The minister said it was “good news”, however, that the Hungary-Ukraine working group will resume meeting next week, with leaders of the two sides also meeting personally, which could “hopefully bring us closer to the reversal of the curbing of those rights… For now it still seems far away, but the fact of talks being held at all should be considered good news.”

The minister said that when NATO evaluates Ukraine’s progress, Hungary would “pay great attention to these aspects”. “When evaluating Ukraine’s performance we cannot overlook the fact that the Hungarian ethnic community in Transcarpathia has not yet been granted the rights it was earlier stripped of… Our allies must be aware of that. Hungary will insist at every international forum that the Trancarpathian community gets those rights back,” he said.

Meanwhile, Szijjártó said protests and blockades staged by Polish farmers had rendered trade across the Ukraine-Poland border “practically impossible”, resulting in “pressure greater than ever” on Hungary’s border with Ukraine.

“This creates unfair conditions: trucks leaving Ukraine often have to wait 14-16 days before crossing, which poses a serious … difficulties for the Hungarian economy, as many Hungarian companies are dependent on trade between Hungary and Ukraine,” he said, calling for a reducion of waiting times. “I want to firmly state that [Hungary] is not importing agricultural produce; Hungary is maintaining its ban on Ukrainian grain … since protecting the interests of Hungarian farmers is a priority,” he said.

Hungary’s ambassador to Ukraine will sign an agreement next Monday on opening a new crossing station between Nagyhodos in Hungary and Velyka Palad (Nagypalad) in Ukraine, Szijjártó said, adding that local Hungarians in Ukraine had a long-standing request for such a facility. Moreover, unloaded trucks will be given an opportunity to cross at Beregsurany, which will “reduce the problems of Hungarian companies relying on imports from Ukraine,” he added.

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Hungary and Ukraine to sign border traffic agreement

szijjártó brussels ukraine border traffic agreement

Hungary and Ukraine is expected to sign a border traffic agreement on Monday, paving the way to opening a new crossing between the two countries, the foreign minister said on Thursday.

New border crossing with Ukraine on the horizon?

Noting a meeting in Uzhorod (Ungvar) earlier this year, and the decision to set up a working group “to find a way to restore all rights of the Hungarian community they have been stripped of since 2015,” Péter Szijjártó said on Facebook that “we sat down, virtually, in Budapest, Kyiv, Brussels and Uzhorod on Thursday to continue the work we started.”

He said that at the meeting with his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmitro Kuleba, and presidential office head Andriy Yirmak in January, “we put our expectations down in an 11-point list of steps necessary for . restoring the Hungarian ethnic community’s rights connected to preserving their identity and use of the mother tongue.”.

The border traffic agreement expanding capacity at the existing crossings and opening a new one “will provide a good baseline of trust” for that process, he added.

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Orbán cabinet takes further steps to rebuild trust with Ukraine

Hungarian government rebuilding trust with Ukraine

The Hungarian government has taken further steps in recent weeks “so that we can again talk about mutual trust in Hungary-Ukraine relations,” the foreign minister said on Facebook late on Wednesday.

Péter Szijjártó mentioned, for example, changes to the interstate agreement on border crossing, adding that the changes would help eliminate “unfair” situations at the border between the two countries. “We are looking forward to tomorrow’s meeting of the Hungarian-Ukrainian education team with hope, since the most important task is to restore the rights of the Hungarian community in Transcarpathia to education and the use of their mother tongue,” the minister said.

Referring to an infrastructure development project at Fenyeslitke crossing station, Szijjártó said it would facilitate reloading an annual one million containers or three million tonnes of grain and cooking oil, which could “contribute to maintaining Ukraine’s exports to Europe”.

Hungarian government rebuilding trust with Ukraine
Photo: FB/Szijjártó

In another Facebook entry Szijjártó mentioned Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly, and said “we have set the goal to give new momentum to the cooperation between Hungary and Canada”. He noted Hungary’s upcoming European Union presidency and that Canada would be the rotating president of the G7 next year.

“Our defence cooperation is an important pillar of Hungary’s security,” Szijjártó said, and noted that Canada had provided training to Hungarian fighter pilots in recent years and that the Hungarian military had purchased its air defence radar systems partly from Canada.

“Both countries are in the nuclear camp, with nuclear energy having an over 10 percent share (in total consumption) and we have agreed that we would exploit opportunities in research and development cooperation,” the minister said.

Szijjártó also said Hungary’s exports to Canada, mainly food products, exceeded an annual 450 million dollars, adding that it was “a great record”.

With Melanie Joy
With Melanie Joy. Photo: FB/Szijjártó

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Ukrainian-Hungarian Intergovernmental Consultation to review the situation of Hungarians in Transcarpathia

Ukraine and Hungary Cooperation

Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, on Tuesday said he has spoken by phone with Andriy Yermak, head of the Ukrainian president’s office, and they reviewed the situation regarding the rights of the Transcarpathian Hungarian community.

In a post on Facebook, Szijjártó said that following a decision made at their previous meeting in Uzhhorod (Ungvár) on Jan 29, a working group will hold an online consultation on Thursday, adding he was hopeful that “progress will be made”.

“We reviewed the infrastructure development projects at the Ukrainian-Hungarian border and established that while progressing at a good pace, they must be speeded up so as to eliminate … long waiting times,” he wrote.

Szijjártó will hold talks with the Ukrainian foreign minister on the sidelines of a meeting of NATO foreign ministers on Wednesday.

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