Croatia

Hungary prepared to meet energy security challenges, says foreign minister in Belgrade

belgrade forign minister hungary

Hungary will need new solutions and transport routes to handle uncertainties in energy supplies expected from next year, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said in Belgrade on Monday, but added that Hungary was prepared for the challenge.

Szijjártó told a regional energy security forum that gas supplies were crucial for central Europe, yet in recent years “there have been few developments that gave us reason to be glad”. “Next year will be a watershed in this regard,” he added.

Uncertainties may arise from next year that will influence the whole region, he said. It is uncertain if central Europe can receive Russian gas through Ukraine from 2020, he added.

“Hungary is prepared for the challenge,” he said citing an agreement signed with Russia which will secure gas supplies in 2020.

However, in the years to follow, Hungary’s capability to import gas “from new sources and through new routes depends exclusively on its allies”, he added.

“It depends on our Croatian friends if they build their LNG port and it depends on decisions by an American and an Austrian company if gas found in Romania is extracted,” he said.

“If neither happens … Hungary will have no other choice but to focus on developing a southern transport route through which Russian gas could arrive through Turkey, Bulgaria and Serbia,” he added.

Hungary has made the necessary technical steps to receive 6 billion cubic metres of gas from the south through Serbia starting in 2021 and 10 billion cubic metres from 2022, Szijjártó said.

Szijjártó added that

“secure energy supplies are a matter of national security and sovereignty.”

On the sidelines of the forum, Szijjártó had bilateral talks with the energy and economy ministers of Serbia, Romania, Montenegro, Bulgaria, and the Bosnian Serb Republic.

As we wrote before, Hungary would “gladly” diversify its energy supplies, but doing so requires proper infrastructure and the necessary investment decisions, the foreign minister said, read more HERE.

PM Orbán discusses Paks upgrade with Rosatom CEO Likhachev

Foreign minister: Cooperation in Central Europe crucial for Hungary

hungary croatia cooperation

Hungary has “always attached great significance” to the cooperation between central European countries, the foreign minister said in Zagreb after inaugurating Hungary’s new embassy compound together with his Croatian counterpart, on Thursday.

Croatia is our ally, a friend and a good neighbour,” Péter Szijjártó told a joint press conference held with Marija Pejcinovic Buric.

He said Croatia is a popular destination for Hungarians, noting that 655,000 visited seaside resorts there last year. Hungarian tourists contributed 400 million euros to Croatia’s tourism revenues in 2018, Szijjártó added.

The minister said the world was changing “at an unprecedented pace” with new conditions in global politics and economy under which “stability, rationality and predictability, traits of central Europe”, have become highly valued.

Countries in the region have understood the importance of cooperation, making them stronger, Szijjártó said.

The foreign minister noted that Hungary-Croatia bilateral trade exceeded 2.2 billion euros in 2018. The largest Hungarian companies are present in Croatia, he said, adding that Hungarian businesses had recorded 4 billion euros worth of investments so far.

Szijjártó thanked his counterpart for the support Croatian government MEPs showed Hungary in “the face of the fiercest attacks” in Brussels.

Szijjártó held talks with Croatian President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic and Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic in the morning.

Asked about a dispute surrounding Hungarian oil and gas company MOL and Croatian energy company INA after his talks with Plenkovic, Szijjártó said, “Hungary has always reassured his Croatian friends that business issues do not feature on the Hungarian government’s agenda”. “But we realise that issues surrounding MOL and INA, and between MOL and the Croatian state, have burdened our relations,” adding that it was up to the two companies and the Croatian state to reach an agreement.

The Hungarian government can only “keep its fingers crossed” that they do, he said.

Improving relations from that point of view would be crucial for Hungary, Szijjártó said, arguing that energy security was critically important for central Europe.

Orbán cabinet welcomes Croatia’s ethnic Hungarian HMDK victory

croatia flag

The Hungarian government has welcomed the “sweeping victory” of Croatia’s ethnic Hungarian HMDK party in the neighboring country’s minority self-government election held on May 5.

Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjén and Árpád János Potápi, the state secretary for ethnic Hungarian communities abroad, congratulated HMDK leader Róbert Jankovics and party members on their “historic success”, in a joint statement released on Tuesday.

In Sunday’s vote a total of 365 Hungarian representatives were elected to fill posts in 11 counties, Jankovics told MTI on Monday.

The outcome of the vote is “a victory” for not only HMDK but the exemplary collaboration of Hungarians in Croatia, they said.

It is “a big success for a small community” which can be presented as a model for Hungarians in the Carpathian Basin and around the world, Semjén and Potápi said.

Hungary in talks to acquire stake in Croatian LNG terminal

vessel-lng sea

Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó will meet Tomislav Coric, Croatia’s minister for environmental protection and energy, in Dubrovnik on Friday to discuss Hungary’s potential purchase of a stake in the LNG terminal being built on the island of Krk, the foreign ministry said.

In a statement to MTI, the ministry said that having the opportunity to import natural gas from the south would be a significant step forward in terms of the energy security of Hungary and the region.

He noted that

Croatia and the European Union recently greenlit the LNG terminal.

Coric said on Sunday that the Croatian government recently received the Hungarian foreign ministry’s declaration of intent that Hungary is ready to acquire a 25 percent stake in the terminal, adding that talks on the matter were ongoing.

The minister expressed hope that interest in the stake and the purchase of capacities in the terminal would increase over the coming months and years. Whether Hungary can acquire a stake in the terminal, he said, would depend on the outcome of the talks.

The terminal, estimated to cost 234 million euros, is expected to begin operating in 2021.


HUNGARY COULD IMPORT GAS FROM AZERBAIJAN FROM 2021

Péter Szijjártó, the foreign affairs and trade minister, reached an agreement with Parviz Shahbazov, his Azeri counterpart, in Baku to set up a working group tasked with laying the groundwork for the delivery of natural gas from Azerbaijan to Hungary from 2021. Read more HERE.

Hungary, Croatia to expand military cooperation

Croatia Hungary defence ministry

The defence ministers of Hungary and Croatia discussed plans to expand defence cooperation in Budapest on Monday.

Tibor Benkő of Hungary and Damir Krsticevic of Croatia signed inter-governmental agreements on air policing and setting up a central European multinational division.

Both ministers praised bilateral defence cooperation and stressed their common responsibility “for the security of European peoples”.

Benko said that as both countries are NATO members, the agreements signed would help intensify NATO’s air defence capabilities.

Krsticevic said the air policing agreement will enable the two countries to defend one another’s air space without special diplomatic permission or government consent.

The two ministers also coordinated a planned multinational military exercise to be held in Hungary from April 25 to June 10.

As we wrote before, eight cargo aeroplanes, thirty-six helicopters, forty-four modern combat cars and twenty-four mobile cannons are the newest equipment of the Hungarian Defence Forces which refresh their outdated and almost twenty-five years old technology which was used for fifty years. Read more details HERE.

Sensational comeback! Hungary beats Croatia – VIDEO, Photos

Sensational comeback! Hungary beats Croatia

A scrappy but hugely valuable winning goal from Máté Pátkai kickstarted Hungary’s UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying campaign as Marco Rossi’s men defeated Croatia 2-1 in the Groupama Aréna in Budapest last night.

Ante Rebić had given the visitors’ an early lead but Ádám Szalai’s low finish from a tight angle restored parity before the half-time break and Pátkai’s intervention completed a stirring comeback in front of another capacity crowd at the stadium of Hungarian league leaders Ferencváros.

Hungary head coach Rossi opted to ring the changes after last Thursday’s 2-0 defeat away in Slovakia, the most prominent of which saw Balázs Dzsuzsák start on the right wing in his 100th appearance for the national team, an occasion marked by the gift of a framed shirt from MLSZ President Dr Sándor Csányi before the kick-off.

Botond Baráth, Máté Pátkai, Dominik Nagy and Dominik Szoboszlai were the other men to come in as the hosts lined up in a 4-2-3-1 formation against a team with three points already on the board after Croatia’s 2-1 away win over Azerbaijan three days earlier.

Perhaps Hungary paid just a little too much respect to their illustrious opponents in the first few minutes, Luka Modrić’s free-kick from the right channel being headed over by Dejan Lovren nine metres outin the fourth minute before Ivan Perisić cut inside two minutes later and unleashed a low drive which Guácsi did well to get his full body behind and gather.

In the very next passage of play, Borna Barisić’s left-wing cross evaded Botond Baráth but Andrej Kramarić could only divert the ball narrowly over the crossbar.

Back came Hungary though and a right-wing free-kick earned by Szalai, taken by Balázsi Dzsudzsák and headed back across goal by Orbán found its way to Szalai, but the Hoffenheim striker was crowded out before he could fire a shot at goal.

Szalai Hungary football
Ádám Szalai, photo: MTI

Hungary were giving as good as they were getting but there was always the chance of being hit on the counter-attack by this lightning-quick Croatia team. So it proved in the 13th minute when Modrić’s low right-wing cross was taken off the toes of Perisić by Kramarić and helped on to the unmarked Ante Rebic ten metres from the Hungary, the Eintracht Frankfurt forward calmly slotting the ball past Gulácsi’s outstretched left foot and into the bottom right corner of the net.

Modric Croatia Hungary
Photo: MTI

It looked an uphill struggle for the hosts to stay in the game as the 2018 FIFA World Cup silver medallists threatened to score more but to their credit, Rossi’s men composed themselves, stayed solid and gradually started to pose danger again.

This culminated in a deserved 34th-minute equaliser when neat interplay over 40 metres between Lovrencsics, Szalai and Dzsudzsák resulted in the latter feeding the ball down the central-right channel for Hungary’s lone striker to latch on to. Finally supplied with a sight of goal, Szalai rifled through Croatia goalkeeper Lovre Kalanic into the net from a narrow angle.

Almost immediately, the home team were unfortunate not to be awarded a free-kick on the edge of the area when a Croatian defender stepped on the right heel of Dominik Nagy, the Legia Warsaw winger forced to leave the pitch in agony and on a stretcher.

Ferencváros attacker Roland Varga replaced him and he was to go close to edging Hungary into the lead in first-half added time, a smart training-ground corner routine seeing captain Dzsudzák’s eventual cross half-cleared to Varga, only for his half-volley to bounce just wide of the left post.

The first 15 minutes of the second half were a very even affair but that situation was punctured by Szoboszlai’s loss of possession 30 metres from his own goal, Croatia moving the ball on well to Perisić but his shot from seven metres rolled disappointingly wide.

Croatia’s failure to convert their possession and chances into goals meant wholehearted Hungary could always harbour hopes of taking the lead and these became reality in the 76th minute when Dzsudzsák’s inswinging corner from the right was contested by Pátkai at the back post, the loose ball being gleefully hooked into the net by the Videoton midfielder a matter of metres from goal.

Rossi’s charges didn’t rest on their laurels though and an almighty scramble in Croatia’s six-yard box almost saw substutute Zsolt Kalmár double Hungary’s advantage, only for his two close-range efforts to be blocked by frantic defenders.

The visitors’ evening was summed up in added time when a Baráth clearing header fell invitingly to FIFA 2018 Player of the Year Modrić on the edge of the penalty area, but the midfield maestro could only skew a half-volley wide of Gulácsi’s right post.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4TKgcfrUyPM

The final whistle blew soon after, an ecstatic home crowd rightly lauding the players who have handed their team their first three points of the qualifying group and signalled Rossi’s squad will be right in the fight for UEFA Euro 2020 qualification.

Sensational comeback! Hungary beats Croatia
Photo: MTI

61 million in central Europe reject migration – Survey

migration refugee crisis

In central Europe, 61 million of the 83 million voters reject migration, a survey published by the Nézőpont Institute on Tuesday showed.

Nézőpont asked by phone a sample of 1,000 in each of the nine countries involved in the survey of their opinion on migration.

In Hungary, seven million of a total of eight million voters reject non-European migration.

In the Czech Republic, 8 million, in Poland, 22 million are against it, Nézőpont found.

The number of pro-migration voters is around or below 1 million in Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia, it said.

In total, 61 million voters in the region reject and 16 million approve of migration, Nézőpont said.

The survey was conducted in Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia and Slovenia in February.


HUNGARIANS MORE POSITIVE ABOUT EU THAN AVERAGE – EUROBAROMETER

Hungarians have a more positive view of the European Union overall than EU citizens on average, read this fresh Eurobarometer survey.

Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary to create regional operations command

hungarian military army

Hungary, Slovakia, Croatia and Slovenia on Wednesday signed a letter of intent to create a Regional Special Operations Component Command (R-SOCC) in Hungary, Defence Minister Tibor Benkő said on Thursday in Brussels.

The command will start operations in 2021 and will be at full capacity by 2024, he told a press conference at NATO’s headquarters, where he attended a two-day meeting of the member states’ defence ministers.

Austria, which is not a member of NATO, is expected to join the agreement later on, Benkő said.

The command will contribute to NATO’s collective security by tackling “challenges from the east and south”, he said.

One focus will be the Western Balkans, Benkő said. The stability and security of the region is of primary importance to Hungary, he said. NATO member states should take a leading role in “finding solution to the situation in Kosovo” and preserving peace there, he said.

NATO also must have responses to changes in security environment of the past few years, he said.

Hungary has started upgrading its defence system, which will also strengthen the Alliance, Benkő noted. Hungary will raise the number of its troops on NATO missions by 200 to 1,200, he announced at the meeting.

Regarding defence spending, Benkő said that by spending 1.4 percent of GDP on defence, Hungary had outperformed the 1.04 percent it has committed to in 2014.

Hungary has made strides towards its NATO obligation of spending 2 percent, he said.

Benkő said Hungary regards Ukraine as a friendly country and it will continue to contribute towards restoring the country’s peace and security. Kiev, however, must live up to its obligations stemming from its Euro-Atlantic aspirations, he added.

Referring to Hungary’s undertaking to provide medical treatment for wounded Ukrainian soldiers, Benkő said: “Hungary has not changed its attitude when it comes to the programme, and undertakes to treat a further 60 wounded Ukrainian soldiers”.

Meanwhile, at an informal meeting of NATO Defence Ministers, Benkő drew Ukraine’s attention to the recommendations of the Venice Commission on Ukraine’s education law. He said it was unlikely that substantial progress would be made before Ukraine’s March presidential elections.

Hungary regards the situation of Transcarpathian Hungarians as “extremely important”, he said, adding that it will not allow minority rights to be undermined.

Regarding the future of the INF nuclear arms treaty, Hungary concurs with NATO’s standpoint that deterrence should be boosted and that dialogue with Moscow intensified. “Even when it comes to deterrence, a balance must be found that allows confidence-building and an conditions on an equal footing.”

Benkő noted that Hungary is not in any direct danger from the war in Ukraine but the military alliance should establish the necessary level of defence capabilities based on its collective security. Accordingly, NATO has developed a contingency plan for all countries, including Hungary, he added.

Featured image: MTI

Hungarian football’s 2019 diary

hungarian national team 2018

With the Hungarian men’s league championship back underway this weekend, we take a quick look at what’s in the diary for Hungarian football in the year of 2019, with UEFA Euro 2020 qualifiers, youth-level elite rounds and the Women’s Champions League final in Budapest featuring prominently.

February:

  • 21st: Women’s European Championship qualifying draw in Nyon. The matches will take place between 26th August 1019 and 22nd September 2020
  • 20th and 27th: Hungarian Cup 9th round
  • 23rd: FÖRCH Women’s Hungarian Cup semi-finals
  • 23rd-24th: Men’s and Women’s Futsal Hungarian Cup Final Four

March:

  • 8th: Tickets on sale for the Women’s Champions League final
  • 10th: Women’s Jet-Sol Liga restart
  • 21st: Slovakia-Hungary, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 20th-26th.: Men’s U19 Elite round, Croatia
  • 21st-27th: Women’s U17 Elite round, Hungary
  • 24th: Hungary-Croatia, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 26th March-1st April: Men’s U17 Elite round, Hungary
  • 26th-31st March: U19 futsal UEFA Euro qualifiers, Tbilisi

April:

  • 2nd-8th: Women’s U19 Elite round, Spain

May:

  • 16th: FÖRCH Women’s Hungarian Cup final
  • 18th: Women’s Champions League final, Budapest, Groupama Aréna
  • 18th/19th: Women’s futsal championship final, 1st match
  • 18th/19th: Women’s futsal championship final, 2nd match
  • 25th: Hungarian Cup final
  • 25th/26th: Expected dates for the 1st matches of the Jet-Sol Liga championship final and bronze-medal match series
  • 30th/31st: Futsal men’s championship final, 1st match

The Jet-Sol Liga champions will be crowned at the end of spring. Currently, Ferencváros lead the table with MTK in the second spot.

June:

  • 1st/2nd: Expected dates for the 2nd matches of the Jet-Sol Liga championship final and bronze-medal match series
  • 1st/2nd: Women’s futsal championship final, 3rd match
  • 3rd: Futsal men’s championship final, 2nd match
  • 6th: Expected dates for the 3rd matches (if needed) of the Jet-Sol Liga championship final and bronze-medal match series
  • 6th/7th: Futsal men’s championship final, 3rd match
  • 8th/9th: Women’s futsal championship final, 4th match if needed
  • 8th: AzerbaijanHungary, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 10th: Men’s futsal championship final, 4th match if needed
  • 11th: Hungary-Wales, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 13th/14th: Men’s futsal championship final, 5th match if needed
  • 15th/16th: Women’s futsal championship final, 5th match if needed

Hungary’s national teams are also counting on their fans’ support in their autumn European Championship qualifiers.

September:

  • 9th: Hungary-Slovakia, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier

October:

  • 2nd-8th: Women’s U17 (in Hungary) and U19 (in Turkey) Euro qualifying mini-tournaments for progress to the Elite round
  • 9th-15th: Men’s U19 (in Hungary) Euro qualifying mini-tournament for progress to the Elite round
  • 10th: Croatia-Hungary, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 13th: Hungary-Azerbaijan, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 22nd-27th: Futsal World Cup-qualifying tournament, Italy
  • 25th-30th: Men’s U17 (in Belarus) Euro qualifying mini-tournament for progress to the Elite round

November:

  • 19th: Wales-Hungary, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier

Photo: MLSZ

House speakers mark anniversary of Hungarian-Croatian Compromise

House Speaker László Kövér and his Croatian counterpart, Gordan Jandrokovic, marked the 150th anniversary of the Hungarian-Croatian Compromise at a conference in Budapest on Wednesday.

Cooperation is needed more than ever now that “we may be facing a trial more taxing than ever before,” Kövér said in his address. The European Union offers the framework for an alliance, he said.

“We have to find ways to cooperate if we are to preserve our freedom against the empires … using the region as a parade ground,” Kövér said.

Jandrokovic said that the sovereign states of Hungary and Croatia, from a distance of 150 years, have the possibility to evaluate the compromise objectively. “Hungarian history is part of the Croatian and vice versa,” he said.

The bond between Hungary and Croatia was one of the most enduring alliances, and a significant factor in regional politics, Jandrokovic said.

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s visit to Zagreb last Monday further boosted bilateral ties, Jandrokovic added.

The Hungarian-Croatian Compromise signed in 1868 governed Croatia’s political status in the Hungarian-ruled part of Austria-Hungary up until the end of the first world war.

Featured image: MTI

Foreign minister: Hungary, Croatia should further boost economic cooperation

Economic cooperation between Hungary and Croatia benefits both countries overall, but there are areas where ties could be further boosted, the foreign minister said in Zagreb on Monday.

Péter Szijjártó, who is accompanying Prime Minister Viktor Orbán on an official visit to Croatia, said that trade between the two countries exceeded 2 billion euros last year, noting the 420 million euro credit line opened by Eximbank to help Hungarian businesses boost their investments in Croatia.

Szijjártó said the government’s 500 million forint funding allocated annually to northern Croatia’s Drávaszög economic development scheme over the last two years has been increased to 1 billion (EUR 3.1m) for 2019.

It will support farm and enterprise development projects, he said.

With the acquisition of a Croatian bank, Hungary’s leading OTP would soon become the fourth largest financial player in Croatia, he said.

Szijjártó said he proposed increasing the number of border crossing points from the current seven to boost both countries’ competitiveness.

Featured image: MTI

Orbán: No economic issue more important than Hungarian-Croatian friendship

Addressing a joint press conference with his Croatian counterpart Andrej Plenkovic in Zagreb on Monday, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said he did not know of any economic issue that would be more important than the 800 years of friendship shared by Hungary and Croatia.

Orbán, who is on his first visit to Croatia in seven years, said after talks with Plenkovic that the lack of energy that currently characterises Hungarian-Croatian ties was “unnatural”. He said he had arrived in Croatia to help put bilateral relations back on the right track.

“The thorn must be removed from beneath the nail, and then everything will be alright,” Orbán said. “This is what we would like.”

Orbán said he and Plenkovic had made progress in their talks on the two countries’ ties both in their private meeting and the plenary meeting between their delegations. “We have common ground in terms of a historical perspective,” Orbán said. “We want a strong Europe, we want to strengthen cooperation among European nations and we’d be happy to see Croatia join the Schengen zone as soon as possible, because this too will strengthen Europe,” he added.

Further, both sides see bilateral economic cooperation as excellent, Orbán said. Bilateral trade turnover is constantly rising, as is the number of Hungarian investments in Croatia and more and more Hungarian tourists are visiting the country, he said.

The prime minister also said Croatian and Hungarian minority groups both enjoy living in each other’s countries.

Hungarians living in Croatia are content with their government and speak respectfully about Croatia and Croats living in Hungary are also enjoying the strongest support they have seen from Budapest in a long time, Orbán said.

Asked about the dispute surrounding Hungarian oil and gas company MOL and Croatian energy company INA, Orbán said that if Croats and Hungarians were incapable of working together on a business matter, then they should not, and Croatia should buy back INA.

MOL holds just under half of INA’s shares but has management rights in the company. The other big stakeholder is the state of Croatia. The sides have long been at odds over INA’s strategy.

Asked about the case of MOL President-CEO Zsolt Hernádi, for whom there is an international arrest warrant in place, Orbán said Hungary considered the case a legal matter. “Politics never gets involved in legal matters in our country,” he added. Justice must take its own course according to its own logic, the prime minister said.

Orbán said he would not make any backroom deals regarding any legal matter and that he insisted on the separation of international political relations and legal matters.

On the topic of the LNG terminal under construction in Croatia, Orbán said the role of natural gas was declining in Hungary’s energy mix, as Hungary is busy expanding its nuclear plant and building solar farms. However, given that it will take years before these new energy sources are ready to be tapped, natural gas will remain important, Orbán said, adding that price was the key when it came to gas supply.

The cheapest way for Hungary to get gas is to import it from Russia, he said. The second cheapest option is Romania, followed by Slovakia and then Croatia is only the fourth cheapest, he added. “This is a matter of price for us,” the prime minister said. “If we can find a business model that presents Hungary with an acceptable price, we will cooperate.”

Plenkovic said Orbán’s visit would play an important role in advancing the two countries’ relations. Annual bilateral trade turnover is at 2 billion euros, he said, adding that some 600,000 Hungarian tourists have visited Croatia this year.

On the topic of the MOL-INA dispute, Plenkovic said the issue had been making bilateral ties difficult for ten years now.

Both governments want to settle the dispute, Plenkovic said, adding that it was important not to let the issue continue to affect bilateral ties.

In response to a question, Plenkovic said the Croatian government still intended to buy out MOL’s stake in INA, but it was all a question of price. “But until then … the aim is for both companies to function well.”

Featured image: MTI

Euro 2020 qualifiers: Hungary face Croatia, Wales, Azerbaijan and Slovakia

football hungary

Croatia’s national eleven is top favourite in qualification group E for the 2020 European Championship, Marco Rossi, Hungary’s national coach, said on Sunday.

Group E features Croatia, Wales, Slovakia, Hungary and Azerbaijan, with the top two teams automatically qualifying for Euro 2020.

“Croatia is by far the best squad in the group. As for the others, it will be mainly up to us what results we achieve,”

Rossi told the website of the Hungarian Football Association (MLSZ).

“The Croats don’t need to be introduced to anyone, the runner-up in this year’s World Cup represents a different quality than the other four teams. Hungary will probably wage a tough battle with Wales and Slovakia for the second place. Nor should we underrate the Azeri team,” the Italian coach of the Hungarian team said.

MLSZ President Sándor Csányi said that “Hungary and Hungarian fans will in any case benefit from the European Championship because Budapest will co-host the tournament.”

Ryan Giggs told BBC Sport Wales:

“I think Croatia are favourites and the rest of the teams are competitive. “We’ve shown glimpses of it, now we have to show it consistently going into the qualifiers,” he said.

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Full Euro 2020 qualifiers draw

Group A: England, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Montenegro, Kosovo.

Group B: Portugal, Ukraine, Serbia, Lithuania, Luxembourg.

Group C: Netherlands, Germany, Northern Ireland, Estonia, Belarus.

Group D: Switzerland, Denmark, Republic of Ireland, Georgia, Gibraltar.

Group E: Croatia, Wales, Slovakia, Hungary, Azerbaijan.

Group F: Spain, Sweden, Norway, Romania, Faroe Islands, Malta.

Group G: Poland, Austria, Israel, Slovenia, Macedonia, Latvia.

Group H: France, Iceland, Turkey, Albania, Moldova, Andorra.

Group I: Belgium, Russia, Scotland, Cyprus, Kazakhstan, San Marino.

Group J: Italy, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Finland, Greece, Armenia, Liechtenstein.

Orbán: Hungary-Croatia disputes won’t affect minority issues

croatian minority

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán held talks with Róbert Jankovics, head of the ethnic Hungarian Democratic Community of Croatian Hungarians (HMDK) party, in Parliament on Monday, Orbán’s press chief told MTI.

Orbán and Jankovics agreed that though there are some lingering disagreements between Hungary and Croatia, these do not affect the situations of Hungarian and Croatian minorities in the two countries, thanks in large part to the activities of HMDK, Bertalan Havasi said.

The two leaders reviewed the various investment projects carried out in Croatia as part of HMDK’s rural and economic development strategy with the support of the Hungarian government and discussed plans for further developments.

They touched on the renovation of the reformed church in Laslovo (Szentlászló), the establishment of the educational farm and youth centre in Kopacevo (Kopács) as well as the Hungarian language education and cultural centre in Osijek (Eszék).

Jankovics expressed hope that Orbán would attend the inauguration of a major Hungarian community investment project in Croatia next year, Havasi said.

Featured image: MTI

Hungarian Permanent Conference held in Budapest

orbán máért

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán spoke about central Europe gaining strength as compared to the German-French axis in Europe, at a meeting of the Hungarian Permanent Conference (MÁÉRT) held behind closed doors in Budapest on Friday.

On a recording posted onto the government’s website, Orbán said the volume and value of German-French trade make up merely half of the one between the Visegrad Group and Germany which he called “an unprecedented development”.

The prime minister said he had predicted earlier that central Europe, including the Carpathian Basin, would become the engine of Europe’s economic growth in the years to come.

Orbán said the accession of Montenegro, Macedonia and Serbia to the European Union would be a major step towards enhancing central Europe’s importance in geopolitical terms.

“The reunification of the Balkans is a shared interest of the EU, central Europe and Hungary,” he said.

Addressing relations with Croatia, Orbán said that the Hungarian government had always considered the dispute concerning national oil and gas company Mol an inter-company affair rather than an inter-governmental issue.

“I have tried to explain to them that lifting the Mol dispute to inter-governmental level would justify more forceful action by the Hungarian state which would do major damage to bilateral relations,” he said.

Legal conflicts between companies need to be judged by international courts and the Hungarian state will accept all their decisions in order to settle the conflict, he said.

The prime minister said he would pay an official visit to Croatia in early December.

Orbán expressed hope that large cross-border projects can be implemented in Croatia’s Slavonia region and southern Baranya in Hungary.

Commenting on Slovenia, Orbán said that Marjan Sarec, the new prime minister, was performing without fault in all international forums but promoted a different line in migration than Hungary, supporting the UN migration package.

Orbán added, however, that Hungary’s plan to participate in the development of the Koper port and the extension of the rail link there would not be realised. As a consequence,

the Hungarian government has started talks on access to a port and investment opportunities with Trieste instead of Koper, he added.

Commenting on western Europe, Orbán said that “west of Vienna the situation is hopeless in terms of demographics” because multiculturalism has triggered nearly irreversible social trends in large cities. It will be “spectacular” to witness how the structure and order of political representation will change there, he added.

Assessing economic development programmes funded by Hungary abroad, Orbán said it makes no sense supporting businesses which are then exposed to reprisals by the state that exercises supreme power. Hungary therefore asks the ethnic Hungarian parties to secure through negotiations the majority nation’s consent to such programmes, he said.

This is what happened in Romania where Hungary is now able to implement economic development programmes with the agreement of the majority nation, he said.

Orbán said the MEPs of the Romanian house speaker’s party, even if they belong to the Liberal group, had voted against the Sargentini report that condemned Hungary in the European Parliament. As a consequence, the European lawmakers of Hungary’s governing parties unanimously supported Romania in a vote on an EP resolution that attacked that country earlier this week.

Regarding Slovakia, Orbán said the Hungarian-Slovak Most-Hid party posed a problem of structural nature, raising the question whether mixed inter-ethnic parties or ethnic-based parties are more useful in the region. Orbán warned it would be “fatally dangerous” to change over to mixed inter-ethnic based representation which he called “a trap to be avoided”.

Orbán described Serbian-Hungarian relations as “unprecedented”, adding that the past few years had seen efforts to raise them to strategic level. He appreciated the Hungarian and Serbian presidents’ efforts to pave the way for historic reconciliation.

Hungary would be happy if Serbia’s legal regulations were generally followed in the Carpathian Basin as a whole, he said, adding that cultural autonomy has been practically achieved.

Commenting on Ukraine, Orbán said

Hungary “is not getting on” with the leaders of that country. “We come to an agreement on Monday and next day they say that no agreement has been reached,” he said, accusing the Ukrainian leaders of failing to take the negotiations seriously.

Their latest proposals, he said, made things even worse, and the open deployment of the secret services against ethnic Hungarians and suspected dual citizens went beyond what is tolerable in the Carpathian Basin.

Hungary can do only one thing, making it clear that the only road for Ukraine to NATO and the EU leads through Hungary and Budapest, Orbán said.

Hungary to expand transport links with Croatia

The Hungarian government aims to expand the number of border crossing points and transport links between Hungary and Croatia, a foreign ministry official said on Wednesday.

Hungary and Croatia’s 355 kilometre-long shared border at this point only has seven public road border crossing points, deputy state secretary Péter Kiss-Parciu told a conference in Zalakaros, in western Hungary.

The government wants to expand the number of legal border crossing points and public transport links between the two countries, he said.

Hungary and Croatia are conducting high-level talks on the matter, Kiss-Parciu added.

Among the ongoing cross-border development projects, the deputy state secretary named the demining of the Baranya county border region — which the European Union is supporting with a 3 million euro grant — and the disbursement of 10 million euros among Hungarian and Croatian SMEs.

Márton Szűcs, who heads the joint secretariat overseeing Hungarian-Croatian cooperation schemes, said that in the 2014-2020 funding period, Hungarian and Croatian companies can bid for a total of 60.8 million euros in funding.

Plans are to invite bids for another 20 million euros of funding for tourism, cultural, education and environmental protection-related schemes in January, he said.

Hungary, Croatia PMs discuss ties, EPP cooperation

The prime ministers of Hungary and Croatia discussed bilateral ties and challenges faced by Europe at their meeting on the sidelines of a European People’s Party (EPP) congress in Helsinki on Wednesday.

Viktor Orbán and Andrej Plenkovic reviewed topical political and economic issues and discussed their countries’ preparations for next spring’s European Parliamentary elections, Orbán’s press chief told MTI.

Parties at the talks advocated the “closest possible” cooperation within the EPP to secure the best results at the EP ballot in May.

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán also held talks with Finnish counterpart Juha Sipila on the sidelines of the European People’s Party congress.

Photi:MTI 

Referring to recent remarks by EPP lead candidate nominee Alexander Stubb, Orbán said at the talks that “Stubb’s accusations against Hungary cannot damage excellent Hungarian-Finnish relations.”

Orbán had earlier voiced support for the candidacy of Manfred Weber to head the EPP rather than “pro-migration” Stubb.

Stubb said last week that the EPP should consider excluding Orbán’s ruling Fidesz. Unless Orbán pays respect to EPP’s values, he must leave the group, the Finnish politician said in an interview with the German media group Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland.

Featured image: MTI 

Alert stepped up along Hungary’s southern border after Bihac incident!

Bosnia migration

The government has stepped up the alert along Hungary’s southern border in the wake of a recent incident involving illegal migrants on the Bosnian-Croatian border, Lajos Kósa, head of parliament’s defence and law enforcement committee, said in Mohács, in southern Hungary, on Saturday.

“What happened on the Bosnian-Croatian border, at Bihac, cannot be allowed to happen here,” Kósa told journalists after visiting the point where the borders of Hungary, Serbia and Croatia meet.

Bihac was a repeat of the clash in Röszke, on the Hungarian-Serbian border, in 2015, he said, adding that NGOs organising illegal migration and financed in no small part by US billionaire George Soros paved the way for the illegal entry of migrants into the EU on the Bosnian-Croatian border.

Kósa said that

at present about 70,000 migrants heading for western Europe are waiting along the Balkan route.

On Friday alone, Hungarian police caught 23 illegal entrants, he added.

Police helicopters are patrolling the Serbian border twice a day and electronic devices are monitoring any “organised movement” on the other side of the border, he said.

State secretary of defence Szilárd Németh said that

1,200 soldiers are standing by, ready to be deployed along the border within 24 hours, and another 1,100 within 72 hours.

Photo: MTI/AP/Amel Emric