Ukraine

Transcarpathia annexed to Hungary? Map revealed by Russian Security Chairman

Map Ukraine Hungary Transcarpathia Russia Romanian rector
During the Russian Federal Education Marathon on Monday, Dmitry Medvedev, Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council, delivered a lecture addressing various topics, including the geopolitical landscape of Ukraine. Of particular interest was the display of a map showing Transcarpathia as part of Hungary.

In his address, the Deputy Chairman underscored the notion that Ukraine’s separation from Russia should be reconsidered. However, the focus shifted from his words to the map displayed behind him, depicting most of Ukraine as Russian territory, with Transcarpathia appearing as part of Hungary.

https://twitter.com/vicktop55/status/1764590921172099237

The redrawn map implied Poland gaining north-western Ukraine, Romania acquiring territory in northern Moldova and Ukraine retaining only the Kyiv province. Medvedev also asserted that a peace agreement would remain elusive until Ukraine had new leadership and recognized Russian-occupied territories.

Furthermore, Medvedev noted that relations between Moscow and Washington were at their lowest ebb since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, as reported by Reuters. The former Russian president has consistently argued that Ukraine is an artificial nation and will never be recognised as legitimate by Russia. In 2022, Medvedev had previously proposed a vision where Poland and Hungary would reclaim portions of what he termed the “former Ukraine.”

Earlier this year, Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán, in an interview with Die Presse, emphasised the geopolitical reality of Ukraine’s fixed territorial boundaries, regardless of preferences. He advocated for the establishment of a buffer zone between Russia and the West, supported by strong security guarantees. The Prime Minister warned:

If this effort fails, Ukraine will lose its land. Russia will dismantle Ukraine again and again.

Putin’s thoughts on Transcarpathia

Despite strained relations between Hungary and the Ukrainian leadership, the Hungarian government has steadfastly advocated for peace between Russia and Ukraine for two years. László Toroczkai, leader of the Mi Hazánk Movement, recently declared that if Ukraine were to collapse, his party would assert territorial claims over Transcarpathia, drawing criticism from other political parties.

Toroczkai’s remarks attracted attention during an interview with former Fox News reporter Tucker Carlson in February. Carlson interviewed Russian President Vladimir Putin about alleged offers of Ukrainian territory to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Putin denied any discussions with the Hungarian Prime Minister but hinted that Hungarian residents of Transcarpathia might welcome a return to their ancestral homeland. Putin recalled hearing Russian and Hungarian languages spoken there during his travels in Soviet-era Ukraine, noting the absence of the Ukrainian language, as reported by Index.

Read also:

  • Hungarian nationalists rewrite Romania’s history on Wikipedia? – HERE
  • Hungarian foreign minister: war in Ukraine “not our war” – HERE

The first multifunctional smart shelter for students CLUST SPACE opened in Ukraine at the KPI

Clust Space

Sponsored content

On January 25th, the smart shelter CLUST SPACE officially opened at the Central Library of Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute, marking the first multifunctional shelter for students in Ukraine. The government, education, business, and civil initiatives representatives attended the event.

CLUST SPACE is a unique project combining safe shelter and modern coworking facilities. It aims to ensure uninterrupted educational processes during wartime and to serve as a platform for connecting talented, creative youth with businesses, as this space will continue to operate even after the conflict ends.

Ruslan Tymofieiev, who is the initiator of the CLUST SPACE project, entrepreneur, founder of the venture builder CLUST, and CEO of the venture fund Adventures Lab, commented that CLUST SPACE is not just a temporary solution to the issue of education during wartime, but rather a systematic approach to student development. This project addresses a wide range of social needs and represents a unique security solution that can be replicated in other regions of Ukraine and beyond.

Clust Space

The first smart shelter, CLUST SPACE, was constructed in the Central Library of Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute. Previously, this basement area was one of the library’s book depositories. Today, it is a 600 m2 modern multifunctional space that adapts to the needs of students. Here, lectures can be held, conferences conducted, presentations given, hackathons organized, or it can be used as a coworking space for studying or exams. In addition to the general open space, the area includes large meeting rooms and rooms for online meetings, reading rooms, cafeterias, a gaming zone, shower cabins, and inclusive restrooms.

The shelter space can accommodate approximately 500 people. All the infrastructure, including the ventilation system, is designed for long-term stays during times of danger.

Mykhailo Zgurovsky, the rector of Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute, commented that safety is a critical condition for ensuring educational and scientific processes during wartime. Therefore, establishing a safe and comfortable space, the smart shelter CLUST SPACE, at Kyiv Polytechnic Institute, where the creative community can create world-class innovations, is of great significance for the university and the country. The new innovative shelter based on our scientific and technical library will serve both the KPI community and be effectively utilized by participants of the All-Ukrainian innovation ecosystem Sikorsky Challenge Ukraine, the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, the Ministry of Digital Transformation, and other scientific and educational institutions and departments for the development of innovation.

The construction of smart shelter CLUST SPACE took about five months and cost $400,000, as such a space entails many architectural requirements. This includes a ventilation system that had to be updated entirely, armored glass, acoustic panels, autonomous power supply, accessibility features, and more. All of this became possible thanks to the support of partners. The primary donor of the CLUST SPACE project was Freedom Holding Corp. Additionally, the project was supported by the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, the Kyiv City State Administration, the Sviсhado Foundation, and the Usyk Foundation.

“At Freedom Holding Corp., we believe that CLUST SPACE will become a true support for Kyiv’s student community and a place for effective collaboration between business and creative youth. This space can become a place for shaping a new generation of Ukrainian leaders and a territory where big ideas and unique innovations are born and implemented,” adds Timur Turlov, investor and CEO of the international investment holding Freedom Holding Corp.

Clust Space

During the event, the chief architect of the space, Pavlo Peker, conducted a tour for guests and elaborated on the unique design solutions in detail, additionally, as part of the official opening of CLUST SPACE, a panel discussion titled ‘Smart Money: How Ukraine Can Make a Technological Leap. The Role of Business, Government, and Education took place.

Among the speakers were:

  • Mykhailo Zgurovsky, Rector of Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute;
  • Denys Kurbatov, Deputy Minister of Education and Science of Ukraine;
  • Inna Maliukova, Head of Sikorsky Challenge;
  • Yuriy Kryvosheia, Vice President of the Canada-Ukraine Chamber of Commerce in Ukraine, Managing Partner of Toronto-Kyiv, Co-founder of Yakaboo, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of ‘Promprylad. Renovation’;
  • Oleksii Shaldenko, Ph.D., CEO/Co-founder of Wantent, Associate Professor at the Department of Digital Technologies in Energy at KPI;
  • Natalia Kushnerska, Head of the DEFENCE-TECH cluster Brave1.

Clust Space

The overarching theme of the panel discussion was the importance of collaboration between the government, the educational sector, and businesses to ensure comfortable conditions for learning and the upbringing of the younger generation, which will revitalize Ukraine’s economy after the victory and create innovative startups with Ukrainian roots.

The project initiators emphasized their intention to scale the CLUST SPACE smart shelter project to other regions of Ukraine and are seeking partners to implement these plans. The next space is planned to be built at O. Gonchar Dnipro National University, and they have already secured the first $100,000 from KPI graduate and IT entrepreneur Mykhailo Savchenko.

Disclaimer: the author(s) of the sponsored article(s) are solely responsible for any opinions expressed or offers made. These opinions do not necessarily reflect the official position of Daily News Hungary, and the editorial staff cannot be held responsible for their veracity.

Orbán: there must always be an entity between Hungary and Russia 🔄

pm orbán

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has expressed optimism about Hungary’s economic policy for the next two years, saying the conditions for a stable policy were in place.

Hungarian economy

Speaking at an event on Monday organised by the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MKIK), Orbán said a successful economic policy required competent finance and national economy ministries as well as the backing of a commerce chamber that could cooperate effectively with the government.

He said prime ministers were responsible for making sure that economic policy “remains backed up by simple, common-sense considerations”.

One such principle, he said, was that “it is always better if others owe us than if we owe others”, and it was better to “earn more than you spend … and profit off others than have others profiting off us”.

The prime minister said cooperation between the economy and finance ministries as well as with the chamber all contributed to a stable economic policy.

Orbán noted the government was grappling with “a very high inherited debt rate”, which he said had gone from 52-53 percent to above 80 percent after the 2002 elections. The government had reined it in, he added, but “it went up again after the pandemic”.

“What’s important is that in the end, we’re lenders rather than borrowers,” he said.

Concerning the budget deficit, Orbán said “we are spending more than we earn”, and, referring to employment, he said “if we do not work we will starve to death”. All efforts must be focused on “convincing people that it is worth working”. He said that employment figures reflected the government’s successful policies in this area.

Up to 2020 Hungary was on an upward path, but then the pandemic and the war in Ukraine forced the country to “shift to lower gear” between 2020-2024, Orbán said. Now there was a chance to accelerate in 2024, he said, adding that the real economy had not suffered big problems between 2020-2024 because the government had “allowed people and businesses to make money”.

West and East

The government’s philosophy of building ties across the global economy rather than “translating an economic policy mimicking the West into primitive formulas” had also helped, he said. While the West was “stumbling”, Hungary’s eastern relations “have continued to blossom.”

Hungarian businesses are the fourth largest investor group in their own country, the prime minister said, adding that this was impressive considering “the depths from where they started”.

Meanwhile, Orbán said the economic and political map of the world “is transforming at an accelerated rate”, adding “the western and eastern parts of the world have a completely different opinion on everything”.

Referring to the war in Ukraine, he said “the West, except for the Hungarians”, had got involved in the war, while the rest of the world remained noncommittal or supported Russia. Orbán said East and West had different view on Taiwan too. “With small differences, this applies to the Middle East.” Geopolitical rivalry overrode the logic of the markets, he said. “In fact, technological developments are also determined by political considerations.”

“The outcome of the debate may be crucial,” he said, adding that “one possibility … is decoupling; that is the West separating itself from the rest of the global economy and protecting its positions because competition with the East threatens the loss of areas under Western control and even its internal markets.”

The alternative, connectivity — that is coupling East and West — could mean that “the West loses ground, but the reason for that is a lack of competitiveness; in this case, it would not attempt to use political means to stop the East from advancing but become more economically competitive,” he said.

“Europe does not even believe in its own ability to embark on internal changes … to raise the competitiveness of Western businesses to Eastern levels,” Orbán said. Should a “cold war return with decoupling”, the border between East and West would lie along Hungary’s eastern border, he insisted, adding: “We will become an uninteresting, obscure and dusty periphery of the Western world.”

With cooperation and trade, he said, Hungary would be between two worlds as a country “in which both will find opportunities”, adding that Hungarian economic policy was based on the assumption that its position between those two worlds could be maintained.

Orbán said Hungary is a part of the West, but it would not detach itself from the world’s Eastern parts, noting that Hungary is a member of the Turkic Council, cooperates with China, and it would not give up its cooperation with Russia unless the European Union’s sanctions rendered this impossible in some areas.

“West won’t win it against the Russians”

Orbán said the first lesson to be learned from the war between Russia and Ukraine was the inevitability of European rearmament.

“We don’t know how long the Americans will stay here in Europe, and we can’t guarantee our security on our own, so defence industry developments are being accelerated everywhere,” the prime minister said.

He said Hungarians’ “instincts” had been right, arguing that the country had embarked on an unprecedented military upgrade 3-4 years before the war broke out.

“So we’re ahead of everyone by 2-3 years,” Orbán said. “Politics can sometimes be a world of intuitions, not just matters of fact. This is true for both the green transition and defence industry developments.”

He said the war in Ukraine was a “proxy war”, and it was “completely obvious that the West won’t win it against the Russians”. He added, at the same time, that this was also true the other way round, and “sooner or later there will be peace talks”.

“The question is who has time on their side,” Orbán said. “We’re the only country that says that time is on the Russians’ side, so our interest lies in this conflict ending as soon as possible.”

Orbán noted, however, that “most countries in western Europe, unfortunately, believe that time is on the West’s side”. “This is an interesting train of thought if one is sitting on the shore of the Atlantic Ocean and not the Carpathian Basin.”

He said the main principle of Hungary’s security strategy was that there must always be an entity between Hungary and Russia, “and right now this is called Ukraine”.

The main question of the war from Hungary’s perspective, Orbán said, was whether Russia’s border would move closer towards Hungary, adding that if the fighting continued, the Russian border would be closer, owing to the Russian military successes.

“This is completely against our interests, but at the same time we are convinced that there’s only one way to avoid this: if the West pulls itself together and tries to achieve peace talks,” he said.

Orbán said this “won’t be as easy now as it would’ve been a year ago”, arguing that Russia now clearly had the military advantage.

Trump’s return

Meanwhile, he said, another threat to Europe was that Russia would only be willing to negotiate with the United States, and Europe’s security situation would become dependent entirely on an agreement between Russia and the US.

“So, the direct security situation isn’t looking good … and the only sane chance on Hungary’s part is to bet on President Trump’s return,” Orbán said.

Only a new player who did not have a role in the outbreak of the war could find a way out of it, the prime minister insisted, adding that the world’s only chance for “a relatively quick peace deal” was for there to be political change in the US.

“So, the question of who Hungary likes or doesn’t like isn’t one of sympathy, but about which president pursues a foreign policy that strengthens Hungarian security,” he said.

“We can’t have a say in what kind of a president America should choose, but we don’t see that the current American administration has the ability to secure a swift peace on this front,” Orbán said, adding that this was also a critical factor for the Hungarian economy.

European parliamentary elections

The prime minister said the European parliamentary elections would be significant in terms of “common sense”.

He said the European political scene was divided between “the globalists and federalists on one side and the sovereigntists on the other”. He said politics in Europe today was driven by ideology, adding that the biggest problem was that those in the key positions “tend to think along the lines of left-wing ideology, and those are the kinds of decisions they make”.

But, he said, “ideological thinking” could not keep an equilibrium between ideas and practice. He said the “triumph of ideological thinking over reality” resulted in the enactment of measures in areas like climate policy or agriculture “that seem right in principle but ruin us in the process”.

Orbán said the solution was therefore to elect a right-wing European leadership that “respects reality more”.

“There will certainly be a rightward shift towards common sense in Europe, but it’s not yet known whether this will be a breakthrough or just a change in the balance of power,” Orbán said, adding that realistically it would be the latter.

Visegrad Group

Turning to Hungary’s regional partnerships, Orbán noted that Hungary, Czechia, Poland and Slovakia had for long “thought in terms of the Visegrad Group structure”, and though this should not be abandoned, “as long as it has life left in it”, there was also an opportunity for another cooperation among “sovereigntist countries”.

This partnership, he said, included Hungary, Slovakia, Serbia, noting that there was an election scheduled for September in Austria, too. This, he said, could “easily lead to” an Austrian-Hungarian-Slovak-Serbian partnership in the coming period, which would not replace, but rather complement the V4.

Foreign investments

Meanwhile, Orbán said foreign businesses were pulling 4-6 billion euros in earnings out of Hungary, but a ban on profit repatriation would hamstring investments.

But this “openness”, he said, was not a problem if the foreign investments of Hungarian businesses generated more profits than what was repatriated by foreign companies.

Foreign investments generate an average of 1.3-1.5 billion euros in profits, and factoring in 1.0-1.5 billion euros in EU transfers, this leaves some 3 billion euros of profits in Hungary as against the 4-6 billion that is repatriated, he said.

In terms of the future, Orbán said it was important to support national holdings capable of generating profit abroad and repatriating it, mentioning oil and gas company MOL, OTP Bank, real estate, infocommunications and the defence industry as examples.

If these investments abroad can be financed and supported, and if there are entrepreneurs with competitive goods and services, they have to invest, otherwise “the balance of profits will never be restored, and we’ll always be left … feeling like we’re being exploited”, he said.

Concerning the 6.5 percent budget deficit, Orbán said there were many factors that had to be combined when it came to planning the deficit, arguing that the government did not want growth to be halted, to cut spending, risk the standard of living, or scrap family support measures or utility price caps.

Citing the finance minister, Orbán noted that the government aimed to cut the budget deficit to 4.5 percent of GDP this year, before reducing it to 3.7 percent next year and to 2.9 percent in 2026.

He said the EU economy was only just returning to a “regulated functioning” after the pandemic, noting that EU finance ministers predict that it will take four years for all member states to stabilise their budget deficits below 3 percent and their public debt levels below 60 percent.

If, for some reason, Hungary failed to cut its deficit and debt in three years, it still had another “buffer year” to do so without risking being penalised by the EU, the prime minister said.

He said it was possible to meet this target, noting that a member state that took on structural reforms had seven years to meet the budget deficit and public debt criteria again. “But we don’t trust those in Brussels enough to base our fiscal strategy on this, so let’s stick to this 3+1 year solution,” he added.

Orbán also said it was important to answer the question of “what happens if our bets don’t win”, meaning that the government’s desired political changes don’t happen in either the US or Brussels, and it takes longer to reduce the deficit.

Hungarian FM: Remarks about sending European troops to Ukraine go against NATO decisions

Hungarian foreign minister Péter Szijjártó

Any plan or remark about the potential deployment of European troops in Ukraine “goes directly against” the decisions made by NATO in connection with the war between Russia and Ukraine, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Thursday.

Asked at a press conference to comment on recent remarks by French President Emmanuel Macron in which he said he did not rule out Western troops being sent to Ukraine, Szijjártó warned against making “dangerous statements” that risked escalation.

The minister said words and declarations “weigh far heavier” in tense situations than in times of peace, underlining that Hungary would not send troops to Ukraine “under any circumstances” and was also sticking to its decision against delivering weapons.

Szijjártó welcomed, at the same time, the clear declaration by several European leaders not to send troops to Ukraine, either.

He noted that two years ago, NATO declared that it was not party to the war, and that everything possible needed to be done to avoid a direct confrontation with Russia.

“This decision is one that is still in effect and was taken with the agreement of every member state,” the minister said. “And not only have we not overruled this decision, but we have not even debated the possibility of modifying it.”

Asked about European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s remarks about the risks of war for the EU, Szijjártó said the EU’s security and economic situation had deteriorated under von der Leyen’s EC presidency.

“So it would be preferable if — in this short amount of time that’s left of her term — she didn’t make remarks or decisions that further worsen the European situation either from a security or economic standpoint,” Szijjártó said.

Read also:

Orbán cabinet concerned of what President Macron said about sending troops to Ukraine

President Macron and Zelenskyy

French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent remark not ruling out the option of sending western troops to Ukraine gives cause for concern, Defence Minister Kristóf Szalay-Bobrovniczky said on Tuesday, emphasising Hungary’s rejection to send weapons to the neighbouring country.

“We insist on our position urging a ceasefire and call on the warring sides to start peace talks,” he told a conference of defence force, military and air attaches in Budapest.

“The war in Ukraine has entered into its most dangerous phase as the aggressor seems to be gaining ground, possibly pushing western decision-makers into taking action,” the minister said.

The time of peace in Europe has come to an end, two European, Christian nations have been fighting a terrible, bloody war for two years.” The “massacre” had yielded no military results, nor was one to be hoped for in the near future, he said.

Meanwhile, Csaba Dömötör, a state secretary at the cabinet office, said in a video on Facebook that “the moment has come when the president of France is suggesting surprisingly openly that European troops might be sent to the battlefield in Ukraine… I think we are very close to a proposal requesting Ukraine’s allies for troops to cross the border into Ukraine”.

He cited the Hungarian prime minister envisioning this scenario in an interview last year.

Dömötör concluded the video by reiterating the Hungarian government stance that “We support peace talks and peace”.

Read also:

  • Orbán on Navalny: Chauvinist does not deserve respect in the Hungarian Parliament – Read more HERE
  • Armed Ukrainian terror groups plan to execute Hungarian MPs?

PM Orbán does not believe in Ukrainian victory – UPDATED

Viktor Orbán Ukrainian victory

The Visegrád cooperation has “meaning and future” despite differences in opinion on support for Ukraine, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said after attending a summit of the Visegrád Group in Prague on Tuesday. Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó welcomed it as good news for Hungary that the leaders of the four Visegrád Group countries agreed on continuing the bloc’s cooperation at their meeting in Prague on Tuesday which he said was also in Hungary’s national interest.

“Today’s meeting convinced me that Visegrád is alive and important. We are able to respectfully acknowledge our differences even if we debate each other’s stances. We continue to strengthen cooperation in joint issues. Hungary is ready to do that,” Orbán told a press conference.

The Czech, Polish and Slovak prime ministers also acknowledged differences and took a stance for continued cooperation.

Orbán said the summit “was not one of the easiest ones” as it had focused on “self-reflection” and on whether the Visegrád Group should be maintained in its current form.

He noted that a similar meeting had taken place after the EU integration of the Visegrád countries, ending in the decision to maintain cooperation.

The war in Ukraine “has overwritten everything”, and so the issue was back on the table, Orbán said.

Avoid joint border with Russia

The prime ministers of Czechia, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia were in agreement that Russia’s attack on Ukraine had been a “gross violation of international law”, and that Ukraine needed aid, Orbán said. “Hungary has another issue, namely that it wants to avoid having a joint border with Russia again, as it had bad experiences in the past,” he added.

“One of the most important baselines of Hungarian national security is to have an entity between us and Russia. We help Ukraine also out of our own national interest,” he said.

At the same time, Orbán said the Visegrád countries disagreed on “how to help Ukraine well”.

“Hungary’s stance is clear: we shall not send weapons to Ukraine, with or without troops, but are ready to provide any other aid,” he said, noting the country’s efforts on humanitarian aid and care to Ukrainian refugees.

Despite those differences, Orbán said carrying on with the Visegrád cooperation “makes sense”.

Cooperation has been successful on issues such as illegal migration “as the matter of [mandatory resettlement] quotas is not off the table”. “Without our cooperation, tens or hundreds of thousands of migrants would be roaming our countries.”

It is impossible to tell who will win

Asked who he thought would win the war, Orbán called the question a “trap” and said “it is impossible to tell who will win.”

He rejected “branding” one or the other of the parties “culpable or guilty… that doesn’t lead anywhere”. “I suggest everyone maintains a strategic calm on the issue.”

“All countries have the right to view the Russia-Ukraine war from Russia or Ukraine’s viewpoint.” Hungary, Orbán said, was unique in that respect as it viewed the matter from a Hungarian viewpoint. Hungarians maintain that neither Russia nor Ukraine backed by the West would be able to defeat the other, he said. In that situation, it is imperative to save lives and start peace talks as soon as possible, he said.

He rejected the notion that Hungary had been isolated in international politics because of its views on the war.

Responding a question, all four prime ministers said their countries were not considering to send troops to Ukraine.

Robert Fico of Slovakia said his country “will give all aid needed to Ukraine, except for weapons and ammunition.”

Petr Fiala of Czechia and Donald Tusk of Poland said they would be ready to continue to provide weapons and ammunition.

UPDATE 1: Differences are not as large as they seemed before

The Visegrád countries agree that Russia is the aggressor in the war in Ukraine, and that the latter must be aided, the prime ministers of Czechia, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia told a joint press conference on Tuesday after a summit in Prague. Petr Fiala of Czechia and Donald Tusk of Poland reiterated that their countries would continue supporting Ukraine “in all areas including weapon and ammunition deliveries”. Fiala said Czechia had committed to organising ammunition procurement from third countries “since European countries have run out of free reserves”. The scheme is supported by some 15 countries, Fiala said.

Tusk called Russian President Vladimir Putin a “war criminal”. Viktor Orbán of Hungary and Robert Fico of Slovakia called for peace talks as soon as possible. “The differences between the Visegrád countries are not as large as they seemed earlier,” Tusk said.

UPDATE 2: FM Szijjártó welcomes V4 agreement on continuing cooperation

Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó welcomed it as good news for Hungary that the leaders of the four Visegrád Group countries agreed on continuing the bloc’s cooperation at their meeting in Prague on Tuesday which he said was also in Hungary’s national interest. Szijjártó noted the V4’s “outstanding achievements” in ensuring that central Europe remained “strong, sovereign and competitive”.

“Many were probably expecting the disintegration of the bloc”, he said, adding that the V4 prime ministers had stood up for continued cooperation.

“This is also in our national interest so that we can cooperate in future on matters that will strengthen Hungary, its sovereignty and economic competitiveness,” the foreign minister said, according to a ministry statement.

“The four of us will be able to cooperate in preserving our sovereignty and in designing our own energy mix, as well as in preserving our competitiveness by setting our own tax rates,” said Szijjártó.

He also welcomed that the V4 countries would be able to decide on their own how to protect their farmers against the glut of poor quality grain from outside Europe.

Read also:

  • Orbán on Navalny: Chauvinist does not deserve respect in the Hungarian Parliament – Read more HERE
  • Former Fidesz ally: PM’s wife holds secret power, Orbán family operates Hungary as a corporation – Details in THIS article

Will Hungary deliver weapons to Ukraine? – Here is the minister’s announcement

Will Hungary deliver weapons to Ukraine? Ukraine aid

Hungary is unwilling to send either weapons or soldiers to Ukraine, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, said on Tuesday.

The minister posted a message on social media in connection with “last night’s meeting in Paris”. “Hungary’s position is clear and rock-solid: we’re unwilling to send either weapons or soldiers to Ukraine. The war should not be deepened or broadened, but ended.”

Read also:

  • Former Fidesz ally: PM’s wife holds secret power, Orbán family operates Hungary as a corporation – Read more HERE
  • Armed Ukrainian terror groups plan to execute Hungarian MPs? – Details in THIS article

Crucial documents for this group of foreigners living in Hungary remain valid!

Crucial documents for this group of foreigners living in Hungary remain valid

Crucial documents for many foreigners living and working in Hungary are set to remain valid for another year, providing significant relief for numerous families.

As reported by infostart.hu, documents for refugees who have sought asylum in Hungary following the Russian invasion of Ukraine will be extended for an additional year, even those originally scheduled to expire on 4 March 2023 or 2024. Those affected need not take any further action, as the extension of their document validity will occur automatically.

Infóstart wrote that Ukrainian refugees should regularly check the website of the National Directorate-General for Aliens Policing for updates, particularly within the ‘News’ section. However, we couldn’t find such a section on the website. Instead, we found only the heading ‘Information for Ukrainian nationals fleeing from Ukraine’ HERE, which does not appear to be regularly updated.

Read also:

  • Hungarian Parliament votes in favour, Sweden to join NATO – Read more HERE
  • Armed Ukrainian terror groups plan to execute Hungarian MPs? – Details in THIS article

Hungarian foreign minister: We stand by Ukraine and the Ukrainian people

foreign minister hungary ukraine

The security of Hungary and the Hungarian people are paramount in the midst of a war, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, told lawmakers in parliament on Monday, arguing that a ceasefire in Ukraine and peace talks “must happen as soon as possible”.

“We condemn war … war goes with suffering,” Szijjártó said in response to a statement made by a Ukrainian national minority representative Liliana Grexa. “We stand by Ukraine and the Ukrainian people, and we also support Ukraine’s sovereignty,” the minister said, noting that the government had adopted this position from the very beginning of the war.

Szijjártó said that calling for an end to the war was the only right stance morally speaking. Many of Transcarpathian Hungarians have died, he said. “Not one Luxembourger, Dane or Dutch person has died in this war. But several Hungarians have,” he added.

Noting a visit he made to the Uzhhorod (Ungvár) cemetery in January, he said that seeing the graves of people “who died senselessly at a young age” had convinced him of the need to boost peace endeavours.

Arms shipments and sanctions, he added, were “a strategic mistake” and the policies had “clearly failed”.

Referring to a European Union decision to increase funds for arms shipments by 5 billion euros, Szijjártó said Hungary withheld its veto after receiving an assurance that the country would not have to participate in the deal.

Further, the minister said sanctions had failed “to bring the Russian economy to its knees” while it had caused Europe hardships.

“It’s time to stop the hypocrisy in Europe … and for European countries to stand on the side of peace…” he said.

Szijjártó vowed that the government would stick the course with the “largest humanitarian action” in Hungary’s history. He said Hungary had allowed more than one million refugees from Ukraine into the country and provided access to health care and education to those who stayed, while supporting their employment.

Fully 1,558 kindergartens and schools have refugee students attending, while 500,000 families in 20 Ukrainian counties have received support from Hungarian state, church and charities, he said. Also, Hungary is helping to rebuild schools and hospitals, and has provided 14,000 children with camping holidays.

The minister said the government wanted relations between Hungary and Ukraine to be based on mutual respect, and for that to happen current disputes should be resolved. These, he added, had arisen because the rights of the Transcarpathian Hungarian community had been “violated continuously”.

War in Middle East

Meanwhile, on the subject of the war in the Middle East, the minister said international organisations were denying or relativising the situation which “started with a brutal, hellish terrorist attack”.

He said it was vital to condemn the attack against Israel in the strongest possible terms, adding that a successful counter-terrorist operation in Gaza was in the interest of the entire world, with a view to warding off any further attacks of a similar kind.

The priority of the international community “is to prevent the conflict from escalating”, he said. “We Hungarians are intervening, motivated by a desire to help. We pursue a foreign policy strategy based on mutual respect so that we can talk with all players in the Middle East crisis, countries that see things from all sides…”

“We’ve managed to maintain our strategic alliance with Israel by upholding a partnership based on mutual respect while enabling dialogues with Arab countries,” he added.

“Had we not pursued this strategy … then we wouldn’t have managed to save the lives of Hungarian” hostages trapped in Gaza, he said.

Orbán on Navalny: Chauvinist does not deserve respect in the Hungarian Parliament

Orbán hungarian parliament

In Hungary, children have absolute and full protection, the prime minister said, addressing the opening day of parliament’s spring session on Monday. Meanwhile, Viktor Orbán also asked MPs to support the election of the new head of state and to adopt the parliamentary resolution on Sweden’s NATO accession.

Crime against a child

Regarding the issue of child protection, the prime minister said: “Anyone who commits a crime against a child must be punished and must serve their punishment without any preferential treatment … and no pardon… Human discretion is not sufficient: laws must ensure that such cases never happen.”

Orbán called for regulations to ensure that criminals sentenced for crimes against minors should not be eligible for parole “for any reason”. He asked lawmakers “to close that door”, and he also called on law courts to make their rulings in proceedings under way with that in mind.

Concerning the child abuse case at an orphanage in Bicske, in western Hungary, Orbán said it raised serious concerns apart from the presidential pardon, which had been granted to one of the defendants. Orbán asked why the director of the home, the primary defendant in the case, “could only be sentenced for a second attempt”, adding that the question must be answered.

The prime minister noted he had instructed that

all the heads of child protection institutions be screened, adding that “the eligibility criteria must cover [the person’s] lifestyle, sexual deviancies and psychological suitability.”

Crimes against children will be “met with strong sentiments” because “everybody thinks about their children, and authorities are rightfully expected to conduct the fullest most comprehensive investigation,” he said.

Former president, new president

Orbán thanked the outgoing president, Katalin Novák, for her work. He noted her resignation had been triggered by her decision to pardon someone convicted of covering up child abuse, adding that she should have rejected the appeal made for his pardon. “She did not do so, and her resignation was right,” Orbán said.

Meanwhile, Orbán said Hungary was a strong and stable country, and the process for appointing the next head of state should be done in such a way as to cause the least possible disruption in the country’s affairs, adding that the election should take place without delay.

Orbán thanked the parliamentary groups of the allied ruling Fidesz and Christian Democrat parties for “acting in that spirit” and “showing again that they are worthy of the trust of voters”.

He thanked Tamás Sulyok, the current head of the Constitutional Court, for accepting the nomination for Hungary’s next president, and asked lawmakers to support the presidential candidate.

Orbán said Sulyok had “vast experience, venerable knowledge and undisputable authority”, adding that the top court’s decisions “showed a clear path” regarding the most important issues over the past years and he had won the consent of the legal profession and the public as well.

“I think Hungary now needs such a president,” he said.

Sweden’s NATO accession

The prime minister also asked MPs to support a draft decree on Hungary granting its approval for Sweden’s NATO accession.

Hungary’s ties with Scandinavian countries have involved many disputes, and “several external parties have tried to mediate… This has hindered rather than contributed to the resolution of those disputes,” he said. “Hungary is a sovereign country and will not be dictated to … whether in terms of the subject or timing of its decisions,” he said.

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson’s visit to Budapest last Friday “contributed to the fair and respectful relations between the two countries”, he added.

“There have been and will be differences in opinion since we Hungarians and Swedes are not alike, but we treat our differences with consideration, as serious nations do,” Orbán said.

Orbán said defence-industry cooperation between Sweden and its accession to NATO would strengthen Hungarian security. In addition to extending the existing Gripen contracts, Hungary is also buying four new JAS-39 Gripen fighter jets, which will give the country the capability to carry out NATO operations outside its airspace, he said.

War in Ukraine

Meanwhile, Orbán called for an immediate ceasefire and peace talks with Russia to conclude the war in Ukraine.

“We Hungarians have said from the beginning that there is no military solution to this conflict; the war should be ended rather than deepened and broadened,” Orbán said.

He said Hungary provided care for Ukraine’s wounded and war-disabled, helped with restoring the country’s electricity grid and was carrying out the biggest humanitarian operation in its history.

Orbán on Navalny

According to 24.hu, Viktor Orbán said during parliamentary questions about Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny, who recently died in prison, that

“the Chauvinist do not deserve respect in the Hungarian parliament,”

the Prime Minister began, and then noted that during the Georgian-Russian war Navalny called Georgians “rats”. “Otherwise, rest in peace”, he said.

The opposition had earlier observed a minute’s silence in honour of Navalny, but Fidesz and Mi Hazánk MEPs did not stand up.

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CSOK

Orbán also said the government had taken important decisions since parliament’s autumn session regarding the expansion of the CSOK home purchase subsidy, wage hikes and green energy production and storage.

Armed Ukrainian terror groups plan to execute Hungarian MPs?

Armed Ukrainian terror groups plan to murder Hungarian MPs

According to the Hungarian right-radical party, Mi Hazánk Movement, armed Ukrainian groups are threatening the execution of their parliamentary group members.

Dóra Dúró, a mother of four and MP of the party, wrote they reported the issue to the police, and an investigation started. Duró added that Ukraine was a corrupt state and the euro billions transferred by the EU would only enrich the elite of the chaotic country.

The Hungarian Police does not know about an investigation concerning armed Ukrainian groups threatening Hungarian MPs. However, Mi Hazánk reported the issue to the Central Chief Prosecution Office of Investigation, because legal issues concerning MPs belong to them, telex.hu wrote.

Mi Hazánk is against the EU’s Ukrainian financial support scheme. It would leave NATO and supports immediate ceasefire and peace in Ukraine. They regularly attack the Orbán cabinet for being too light concerning the war in Ukraine.

Here is Dúró’s Facebook post concerning the threat:

Hungarian Interchurch Aid supports over half a million people since outbreak of war in Ukraine

Hungarian Interchurch Aid has provided help in various forms to more than half a million people since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, the leader of the organisation told daily Magyar Nemzet in an interview published on Saturday.
“We have given help to some 513,000 people in one of the largest humanitarian assistance programmes in our history,” Laszlo Lehel told the paper, on the second anniversary of the start of the war.

He noted support provided to people moving to temporary community centres set up in the vicinity of the war zones in 22 Ukrainian counties. “We provided them food and supplied on many instances appliances such as refrigerators or helped the facilities that lacked a bathroom or a cooking space,” Lehel said.

Speaking about the charity’s financing, Lehel noted grants won from a humanitarian fund for Ukraine managed in Kyiv in addition to support received from the Hungarian government.

“This year, we have 18 billion forints available to spend on aid programmes,” he said.

Read also:

  • Trump and Orbán can only achieve peace in Ukraine? – Read more HERE
  • Hungarians are the least supportive of Ukrainians in Europe

PM Orbán with Putin again: Hungary vetoed EU’s declaration against Russia

Putin Orbán Russian gas disgraceful role

Despite reports from Brussels sources indicating Hungary’s veto of a joint EU declaration planned to coincide with the second anniversary of Russia’s war on Ukraine, recent events suggest otherwise. The statement was released on Friday afternoon alongside a separate statement issued by the Hungarian government addressing the conflict.

An anonymous source informed Szabad Európa that the EU declaration commemorating the second anniversary of the Ukraine war was vetoed by the Hungarian government without providing any reason. According to a diplomat in a position of authority, the Hungarian government found the language of the statement excessively forceful.

Hungary has consistently blocked multiple EU statements in recent times including a joint declaration opposing Israel’s latest land offensive in Gaza. The statement, which Hungary vetoed, was a joint statement by EU leaders including Charles Michel of the European Council, Ursula von der Leyen of the European Commission and Roberta Metsola, President of the European Parliament. However, any declaration representing the European Union needs unanimous support from all 27 member states.

Statement from the Hungarian government

The Government Information Centre issued a statement on Friday addressing the two-year war in Ukraine. In the statement, Hungary expressed condolences for the victims of the conflict, extended sympathy for the hundreds of thousands of widows and orphans affected and pledged support for Ukraine in caring for the wounded and war invalids.

Hungary also reaffirmed its dedication to assisting millions of displaced persons through its most extensive humanitarian aid program to date, while actively participating in bolstering Ukraine’s energy security and reconstruction endeavours, according to Index. Hungary maintains a steadfast position that there is no military resolution to the conflict. The government urges for an immediate ceasefire and peace negotiations, calling upon all parties involved in the conflict to engage in talks toward this goal.

The EU’s decision

The leading EU institutions including the European Council, the European Commission and the European Parliament issued a statement authorised by the leaders of the member states, while individual member states also released separate declarations.

The joint statement highlights the tragic anniversary of Russia’s aggressive war against Ukraine, emphasising two years of violence and destruction in violation of international law. Despite the ongoing suffering, the statement acknowledges Ukraine’s resilience, and how the people who stayed in the country bravely defended and continue to defend their homeland and fight for freedom and shared European values.

They also emphasised the EU’s ongoing commitment to address Ukraine’s urgent military and defence requirements, highlighting the implementation of unprecedented measures as a united Europe, while working on future security commitments. Additionally, they expressed readiness to escalate pressure on Russia to weaken its military capabilities and affirmed the allocation of funds from frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine.

Read also:

  • Complete peace with Sweden: Hungary buys 4 new Gripen fighter jets – HERE
  • FM Szijjártó: Hungary rejects extreme ideologies – HERE

 

Trump and Orbán can only achieve peace in Ukraine?

Orbán Trump saviours of the world

There is a need for ceasefire and peace, and the leaders best suited to achieve it are Donald Trump and Viktor Orbán, Miklós Szánthó, the head of Hungary’s Center for Fundamental Rights, said at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington, DC, on Friday evening.

Szánthó warned of the unprecedented dangers “the cult of woke” presented to life today.

“The cult of woke …. are a clear and present danger to our way of life and even our security,” Szánthó said. “Woke is just a new form of communism,” he said, adding that “it is a civilisational threat, too.”

“Mass illegal migration waters down the political power of those voters who still remember what the American dream and European prosperity once were. And with its gender ideology, the new left … targets children … undermines the family which is the cornerstone of our societies,” he said.

Szánthó said “gender ideology, cancel culture, rejection of the divine and illegal mass migration are insidious, but slow acting poisons that seek to paralyse the nation and the body politic”.

He said Hungary was “a pain in the liberals’ neck because we stand firm on God, homeland and the family, and we do not allow George Soros to interfere in our domestic issues by giving millions to his liberal comrades”, and repeated the slogan of the Hungarian right wing: “No migration! No gender! No war!”

Szánthó called for stopping the wokeists and setting up the global network of anti-globalist forces, which he said CPAC would also pursue at its next event in Budapest in April.

Read also:

  • Orbán and Trump, the saviours of the world – HERE is the story of our featured image
  • President Trump: Orbán is the boss – VIDEOS and more in THIS article

Hungarian government: War has only brought human suffering

The war between Russia and Ukraine that has now been going on for two years has only resulted in human suffering, Csaba Dömötör, state secretary of the Prime Minister’s Cabinet Office, said on Saturday. Marking the second anniversary of the outbreak of the war, Dömötör said the end of the conflict was not yet in sight.

“But what we can see is that the consequences have been dramatic,” he said in a video on Facebook, noting that hundreds of thousands have died, millions have fled their homes, and “the war has only brought human suffering”. He added that the economic impact of the war was also severe, and not just for the warring sides.

Dömötör said Europe had been “dragged into a miscalculated sanctions policy” that had only resulted in more hardship rather than bringing an end to the war, arguing that the sanctions had resulted in higher energy prices and soaring inflation in Europe, “while Russia hasn’t been brought to its knees”.

Left chose war, government says

Hungary, he said, was also feeling the growing economic burdens, “as the country is under constant pressure to provide more financial support worth billions for the war”.

Dömötör said the past two years had shown that the conflict could not be settled on the battlefield, underlining the government’s repeated call for peace.

Meanwhile, Tamás Menczer, the state secretary for bilateral relations of the foreign ministry, said deciding between war and peace was “a very serious choice”, but the Hungarian government had chosen peace, while the left had chosen war.

Menczer said in a video on Facebook that the Hungarian left would send weapons to the war, “and those who send weapons already have one foot in the conflict”.

He called for an immediate, unconditional ceasefire and peace talks.

Mass demonstration against Putin and his war held in Budapest – PHOTOS

Mass demonstration against Putin and the war in Budapest

Mayor Gergely Karácsony said at a demonstration held on Saturday to mark the second anniversary of the start of the war in Ukraine that Budapest will not compromise on its own or others’ freedom, expressing solidarity with the Ukrainian people.

Karácsony said that the demonstration held near the Russian embassy in central Budapest was meant to send “a message to Putin and Putin’s students” that “Budapest will not compromise on its own freedom or on the freedom of others”.

“We are here today to stand with the courageous Ukrainian people and send the message to the world that although we may have a worthless government, we are not a worthless nation,” Karácsony said.

The mayor expressed shame over Hungary’s incumbent government, insisting that there were conflicts in which it did not come into question whether one sides with the aggressor or the victim.

“Budapest knows what it is like when Russian tanks roll along its streets. Budapest knows how hard it is to stand up for freedom. But Budapest knows, too, that if there is no freedom, then there is nothing, either,” said Karácsony.

PM Orbán pro-Russia politician?

Katalin Cseh, an MEP of opposition Momentum, the chief organiser of the event, said that “Vladimir Putin’s brutal, bloody, inhumane war has been going on in Ukraine for two years now,” with Ukraine fighting “its freedom fight against oppression under a terror which is unimaginable for us overall”.

She called for standing with and helping Ukraine, saying that “it is our duty to show the world that the Hungarian nation will not serve the interests of Vladimir Putin, a war criminal … We are not siding with a war criminal,” said Cseh. Here are some photos shared on her Facebook page:

She noted that more than 500 children had been killed and some 20,000 Ukrainian children had been deported by the Russians in the war.

The Momentum MEP called it “shameful” that “Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has made assistance to Ukraine subject to blackmail because of his questionable and shady dealings with Putin”.

“It is a primary goal for us all that Hungary should not be dragged into the war, but one who acts as a servant to an aggressor in a war is one with a pro-war mindset. Viktor Orbán is one doing so, Viktor Orbán is a pro-war [politician],” Cseh said.

At the demonstration, participants observed a minute of silence to pay tribute to the victims of the war.

Read also:

  • Hungarians are the least supportive of Ukrainians in Europe – Read more HERE
  • No surprise, Hungary also criticises the 13th EU sanctions package against Russia

The Chain Bridge in Ukraine’s national colours:

Hungarians are the least supportive of Ukrainians in Europe

Ukraine Hungarians support

In a survey conducted by the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), Hungary emerged as the country with the highest expectation of a Russian victory over Ukraine. This belief was more prevalent among Hungarians compared to other surveyed nations, except for Poland and Portugal.

The survey, for which the data was collected prior to the withdrawal from Avdiika, shows that 31% of Hungarian participants believe that Russia would win in the conflict with Ukraine. Despite this, in 12 countries, including Hungary, the possibility of some form of peace agreement between Ukraine and Russia was deemed the most likely outcome, averaging around 37% across all participating countries. Significantly, 64% of Hungarians advocated for the EU to pressure Ukraine into negotiations, while 16% supported providing assistance to aid Ukraine in reclaiming its occupied territories, according to Telex.

The Hungarian perspective

A substantial portion of Hungarians who participated in the survey viewed Ukrainian refugees as a potential risk. 37% of respondents perceived them as such, while 19% of Hungarians regarded the Ukrainian refugees as an opportunity. The remaining participants expressed uncertainty, either disagreeing with the perspectives or were indifferent to the question. Hungary would boast the highest percentage of individuals, at 28%, expressing satisfaction if Donald Trump were to win the US presidential election in the autumn. This is not surprising, as the Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán and Donald Trump are considered allies. Nevertheless, Hungarians who support Trump are still in the minority compared to those who would be disheartened (32%) if the Republican candidate were to win the upcoming elections. If the new US leader were to limit current support to Ukraine, 54% of Hungarians believe that the EU should follow suit, marking the highest proportion among the 12 countries surveyed. On average, only a third of respondents shared this sentiment, with 21% preferring to maintain the current level of support and 20% even advocating for an increase. Furthermore, Hungarians, alongside the Greeks, are at the forefront, with 48% expressing the belief that the EU has played a detrimental role in the conflict, while only 25% hold the opposite view. This sentiment is the relative majority among the 12 countries, where 37% perceive the EU’s role negatively compared to the 29% who view it positively.

Searching for reasons

In 2022, a survey polled Hungarians on their perspectives regarding the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, encompassing their perceptions of both nations. Discovering the logic behind Hungarians’ perspectives can be achieved through a closer examination of these statistics. As a result of the ongoing war, perceptions of Russia have notably declined. However, it is worth highlighting that perceptions of the United States have also decreased by 10 points. While there was no survey conducted on Ukraine in 2018, Medián’s 2022 assessment revealed a remarkably low approval rating of 33 points, which is nearly the same as that of Russia, according to 444.hu. The survey investigated preferences regarding closer relations with either Russia or the US in Hungary. Overall, the majority favoured closer ties with the US. However, there were notable differences based on political affiliation. While nearly a quarter of Fidesz voters preferred alignment with the US, the majority leaned towards Russia. Among younger Fidesz voters, there was a stronger inclination towards Moscow, with 65% favouring ties with Russia. The older generation of Fidesz voters seem to think differently, with 54% of those aged 40-59 and 50% of those over 60 opting for closer relations with Russia.

Read also:

  • Strong NATO important to Hungarian government but so is mutual respect – HERE
  • FM Szijjártó: Hungary rejects extreme ideologies – HERE

No surprise, Hungary also criticises the 13th EU sanctions package against Russia

All elements of the European Union’s 13th package of sanctions against Russia that would harm Hungarians interests “have been weeded out”, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said in Brussels on Monday.

The package was “for show” and did not promote peace, Szijjártó told a press conference after a meeting of the EU’s Foreign Affairs Council. The only reason for the new sanctions in the process of being finalised “is that the bloc can now say they did something ahead of the second anniversary of the war”, he added.

In the past weeks, the Hungarian government “has weeded out the measures that may have harmed Hungarian interests,” he said, according to a ministry statement.

Hungary’s fundamental economic interests are not harmed by the package, he said. “But there is a bigger problem: the EU is further pursuing a completely failed strategy, which takes us farther away from peace rather than taking us nearer,” he said.

Hungary will continue to strip any elements that may harm its interests, should further sanctions be proposed, he added.

“The sanctions packages have harmed European competitiveness while improving that of other players in the world economy. That’s a double failure, double disadvantage and double mistake. It would be good if colleagues in Brussels could draw the conclusions,” he said.

He said the EU was “still gripped by war psychosis”, and the majority refused to change its failed strategy.

“It has become clear that there is no solution to the situation on the battlefield,” he said.

“Ukraine is now drafting younger and younger conscripts, which raises the question: who is going to survive this war, who will participate in Ukraine’s reconstruction?”

He urged a ceasefire and peace talks. Hungary has once again refused to take part in delivering weapons to Ukraine, he added.

According to one proposal, the European Peace Facility would be extended by another five billion euros to finance military equipment, he said.

“We made it clear we wouldn’t participate in joint actions aimed at weapons deliveries, and will refrain from blocking such a decision only if it does not impose any duties on us, financial or otherwise,” he said.

Szijjártó said that thanks to a change in the rules of abstention, Hungary’s part of those five billion euros would not finance materiel.

Hungary will have the opportunity to determine the use of those monies, which could be ploughed into the fight against migration or strengthening stability in the Western Balkans, he said.

While Hungary will not stop other member states in making their own decisions, the government thinks weapon deliveries would only prolong war and suffering, he said.

Szijjártó also touched on upcoming talks on the extension of tariff exemptions on Ukrainian produce. Hungary’s government has banned 23 Ukrainian types of produce on its own authority and will maintain that ban should the measure be extended beyond June, he said.

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Agricultural chambers of V4, Latvia and Lithuania to hold joint demonstration on this week

demonstration hungary agricultural

The agricultural chambers of the four Visegrad Group countries will organise a demonstration together with their Latvian and Lithuanian peers on Feb 22 to call the public’s attention to their situation caused in large part by the unrestricted inflow of Ukrainian grain and food products, the head of the National Agricultural Chamber (NAK) said on Monday.

The EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) has gone nowhere over the past years and European farmers have been labelled “climate criminals”, with the term officially codified in community law, Balázs Győrffy told public news channel M1. He called the European Green Deal, a set of policy initiatives proposed by the European Commission, “an unprofessional and unfounded diktat”, adding that “in light of the recent farmer demonstrations, decision-makers are now backpedaling” which Győrffy said he believed “could be because of the upcoming EP elections”.

“The unlimited inflow of grain and food products, mainly poultry, egg and honey, from Ukraine makes the situation worse by creating uneven competition for European farmers and consumers also because they are not subject to strict EU regulations,” said Győrffy.

Speaking to public broadcaster Kossuth Radio, Győrffy said “farmers across Europe are in an uproar and have lost their patience”.

“What we can see is that the elite in Brussels absolutely ignores our opinion and does not listen to our problems”.

As we wrote earlier, Hungarian farmers protested against unlimited Ukrainian agricultural imports – details and PHOTOS

Also we wrote before, that GMO-contaminated Ukrainian seed was seized in Hungary, details HERE.

State secretary Kovács: Hungarian government policy not influenced by Western media

orbán mtva

Hungarian government policy is not influenced by what is said about it in the Western media, the state secretary for international communication and relations told a conference on Thursday.

The “media attacking Hungary” aim to “completely stymie and quarantine the government that has won four consecutive two-thirds majorities,” Zoltán Kovács told the Nezopont Institute’s event on Hungary’s image in the international media. Kovács said there had been “no chance to change this narrative” over the last 14 years, arguing that “the other side … has no interest in such a dialogue”.

The state secretary said Hungarian politics and the Hungarian narrative “rest on reality”.

He said the government aimed to pursue policies based on national interests even if its decisions did not align with what other countries or those working at European institutions thought.

Kovács said it was unlikely that there would be fewer conflicts between Hungary and the Western media in the future, mainly because of Hungary’s pro-peace position on the war in Ukraine, the European Parliament election campaign and Hungary’s upcoming European Union presidency.

Bank Levente Boros, the Nezopont Institute’s director for political analysis, said that according to a study analysing 19,153 mentions of Hungary in 100 politically relevant media platforms of 18 countries, Hungary has been getting more and more media attention in recent years.

He attributed this to Hungary’s pro-peace stance on the Russia-Ukraine war, adding that increasingly often, a neutral perception of Hungary tended to become either positive or negative. In the Anglosphere in particular, news stories about Hungary now tended to be more critical in tone compared with a more neutral view in the past, while most Russian news stories now tended to mention Hungary in a positive context.

Boros said the number of positive pieces written about Hungary had increased slightly in French, Spanish, English and Italian-speaking territories, while the number of Polish-language pieces with a positive tone had decreased last year.

In a panel discussion about perceptions of Hungary in the Western media, German journalist Georg Gafron said there were more critical opinions of Hungary than positive ones. He said journalists should present reality instead of being “propagandists” or “philosophers”, adding that four-fifths of German reporters covered the news from the perspective of the Greens and the Social Democrats.

As regards Hungary’s pro-peace stance on Ukraine, Gafron said more than two-thirds of Germans were in favour of supporting Ukraine and “very afraid of the Russians”, which was why it was harder for them to understand Hungary’s position.

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