The Czech Republic

Hungarian classical music talent show Virtuosos includes V4, Serbia

domingo

Virtuózok (Virtuosos), a Hungarian talent show featuring classical musicians, will include competitors from the Visegrad Group and Serbia in its sixth season starting on November 27, a government commissioner said on Wednesday.

Zoltán Balog told a press conference that the government supported the production because the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Serbia and Slovakia “have common ties in central European culture”.

The show’s producer, Mariann Peller, said Virtuózok drew 1.3 million viewers in its first season in 2014.

This season will air in all five countries, reaching some 70 million people, the organisers said.

Its jury will include Spanish opera singer Placido Domingo, German celebrity Thomas Gottschalk, British-Russian composer and dj Gabriel Prokofiev, Russian-Israeli violinist Maxim Vengerov and Austrian actress Coco Koenig.

The competition will have five winners, one from each country.

All five will have the opportunity to enroll in Virtuózok’s talent mentoring programme, and will receive a 15,000 euro prize.

Patrons of the programme are Hungarian President János Áder and First Lady Anita Herczegh, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and Polish Deputy Prime Minister Piotr Glinski.

Fricska folk dance band
Read alsoOutstanding Hungarian performers who conquered international talent shows – VIDEOS

Czech Republic reimposes mask rules for public indoor spaces

adam vojtech czech minister

The Czech Republic will require face masks in all public indoor spaces across the country starting Thursday, Minister of Health Adam Vojtech said on Wednesday.

“Due to the deteriorating epidemiological situation, this morning I convened an extraordinary meeting of the Central Management Team. We agreed with experts that from tomorrow (Thursday) we will introduce the obligation to wear masks indoors inside the Czech Republic,” Vojtech said on twitter.

Czech people had been required to wear masks in indoor spaces, on public transport, and at mass events in the spring because of the spread of COVID-19. The rules ended on July 1, except for the Prague underground.

But COVID-19 cases have soared in recent weeks. Since September, the authority has asked people to cover their noses and mouths on public transport and during visits to health and social care facilities.

On Tuesday, the country registered a record-breaking 1,164 confirmed cases, according to data from the Ministry of Health.

As of Wednesday, health authorities have recorded 29,877 cases in the country, including 9,272 active ones and 441 deaths.

Germany has decided to put Prague on the list of “risk” areas, according to the Czech Republic’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Everyone who comes to Germany from Prague is obliged to undergo a 14-day quarantine, or to prove himself with a negative test, which should not be performed earlier than 48 hours before entering Germany, said the ministry on its website.

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Read alsoGermany extends travel warning for around 160 countries until end of September

EU: Hungarian border measures favouring the V4 countries are illegal and discriminatory

Hungary V4 Viktor Orbán

Following the Hungarian government’s latest announcement exempting the V4 countries from the ban on entering the country, EU commissioner Didier Reynders is asking the leadership to revisit their decision.

On 1 September, Justice commissioner Didier Reynders posted on Twitter concerning the Hungarian government’s latest border protection measures. As published in an article by Portfolio,

the measures, banning all foreigners but the V4 residents from entering Hungary, are discriminatory and not in line with the fundamental principles of EU law.

As we wrote earlier, the Hungarian government have recently reintroduced their border protection measures, banning all foreigners – with a few exceptions – from entering the territory of Hungary as of 1 September. Hungarian citizens arriving from abroad are required to self-isolate for 14 days unless they present two negative tests.

Then on a conference in Bled, Slovenia, three days after the above announcement, the Czech prime minister asked Viktor Orbán “to allow Czech tourists who already have a holiday booked for September to enter Hungary”. Orbán did agree to this,

but since keeping the other two V4 countries (Poland and Slovakia) under the ban “would not have looked good”, the exemption was granted to the residents of these two countries, too.

Visitors coming from these three countries are only asked to present a negative test not older than five days.

As Portfolio writes, the above measures are mostly driven by political arguments rather than aimed at limiting the spread of the pandemic. Reynder is asking the Hungarian prime minister to revisit the actions taken, “recalling the importance of the integrity of the Schengen area and of applying border measures in a non-discriminatory way to all EU citizens and residents”.

Hungary V4 Viktor Orbán
Read alsoV4 citizens allowed into Hungary even after Sept 1 – here are the conditions

V4 citizens allowed into Hungary even after Sept 1 – here are the conditions

Hungary V4 Viktor Orbán

Czech, Slovak and Polish citizens with negative coronavirus tests will be allowed into Hungary after Sept. 1, if the test results are not older than five days, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said in a post on Facebook on Monday.

Hungary is banning foreigners from entering the country from Sept. 1, in view of the rising numbers of coronavirus infections.

However,

citizens of the Visegrad Group countries will be allowed into Hungary even after Sept. 1,

if they can show negative coronavirus test results not older than five days, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said in a post on Facebook on Monday.

Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban had talks in Bled, Slovenia, on Monday, and agreed to exempt from the ban Czech citizens who had already booked their accommodation in Hungary for September, Szijjarto said. The prime ministers have discussed the Hungarian security measures in detail, and the Czech Republic has given guarantees regarding its own security measures, he added.

Later in the day, Slovak and Polish citizens were also included in the exemption,

as the Visegrad countries have cooperated closely in the fight against the coronavirus,

Szijjarto said on Facebook.

Hungarians spending their holidays in Visegrad Group countries will be allowed to forgo quarantine with just one negative test result, Szijjarto said.

Czech politicians in danger? – 11 MPs in quarantine

Arizona USA Hungary COVID

Eleven members of the Czech Republic’s Chamber of Deputies (lower house of the parliament) are in quarantine after coming into contact with Member of Parliament (MP) and former Defense Minister Karla Slechtova, who had tested positive for COVID-19, local media reported on Tuesday.

The lower house held an extraordinary meeting last Wednesday to discuss electoral procedures ahead of the country’s upcoming Senate and regional elections in October as well as changes to the rules of distance education in schools.

“Some people who were in the immediate vicinity of Slechtova have a negative test.

The deputy wore a veil the whole time and it probably worked,”

Czech TV quoted Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies Radek Vondracek as saying.

The premises of the Chamber of Deputies are now being sanitized, according to the Prague regional hygiene station.

“The situation is not completely new.

We have already had several deputies in quarantine,

for whom the occurrence (of the virus) has not been confirmed. We have procedures in place,” Vondracek said.

As the length of quarantine is currently set at 14 days, the affected lawmakers should be able to attend the next meeting set for Sept. 15, the English newspaper Brno Daily said. Enditem

Czech Republic to require face masks in many indoor areas from September

coronavirus mask woman

The Czech Republic will require face masks on all public transport and in many indoor areas from September following a resurgence of COVID-19 in the country, the country’s Health Minister Adam Vojtech said on Monday.

In March, the Czech Republic was one of the first European countries to adopt wearing face masks as a preventative measure against the coronavirus but gradually phased out their usage.

The new rule, which starts on the same day when the schools open, will require people to wear masks in shops, common areas of schools and in public buildings, but not in restaurants, bars and workplaces.

“We consider this to be a preventative measure given that we are probably facing a complicated autumn, especially after Sept. 1 when there will be high social interaction,” the minister said.

Along with the face mask mandate, the mandatory 14-day quarantine after coming into contact with an infected person will be cut down to 10 days.

The Central European country has reported 20,012 cases of COVID-19 as of Monday evening, with a record 5,816 active cases.

However, officials have cautioned against defining the resurgence of the virus in recent weeks as a “second wave,” given that the amount of hospitalizations has not jumped.

Latest: Coronavirus in Hungary – Registered infections increase by 32

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Read alsoMasks to be compulsory at workplaces in France

Visegrád Group students’ alliance to be formed

höok students hungary

A Visegrád Group students’ alliance is to be formed officially by the end of this year, with the court registration of the organisation already underway, daily Magyar Nemzet said on Thursday.

Cooperation between student organisations in the region strengthened during the novel coronavirus epidemic, David Kosztrihan, foreign affairs official of the National Union of Students in Hungary (HÖOK), told the paper, adding that the formation of a V4 alliance within the European Students’ Union (ESU) will pave the way for several new projects promoting the development of higher education and knowledge exchange.

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Read alsoOrbán: Visegrád Group concludes ‘good year’

He cited an already ongoing quality assurance project, the assessment of student halls of residence and a comparison of the system of subjects taught in various countries. The latter will be used to prepare a package of proposals on best practices worth introducing in more countries, he added.

Kosztrihan said HÖOK had won the right to host the upcoming general meeting of ESU in October but the event will probably be held online due to the pandemic.

He added that several proposals of the student union had been incorporated into new regulations and an effective dialogue had started with those in charge of the education system.

hungary-foreign-minister-Szijjártó
Read alsoVisegrad cooperation successful even in difficult times, says Hungarian FM Szijjártó

“With international backing we are able to present our arguments more effectively. This is another reason that justifies HÖOK’s European activities”, he said.

11 killed, ten injured in house fire in Czech Republic

wildfire firefighter

Eleven people died and ten others were injured in a pre-fab house fire in Karvina region in the eastern part of the Czech Republic on Saturday afternoon, local media reported.

A fire broke out on the 11th floor of the house in Bohumin on Saturday afternoon, killing 11, including six in the burning house and five who jumped out from windows on the 12th floor. In addition, ten people were injured in the fire, including two firefighters and one police officer, said the report.

The firefighters have already extinguished the fire.

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Read alsoRomanian police detain foreigner suspected of making firearms with 3D printers

An intensive investigation is underway into the circumstances and causes of the tragic event, Czech Police tweeted. But local media quoted Moravia-Silesia Region Governor Ivo Vondrak as saying that everything indicated that Saturday’s fire was an arson attack.

Regional police chief Tomas Kuzel said they have detained a man in connection with the fire.

Daily News Hungary
Read alsoUkraine reports two ceasefire violations despite full truce in Donbas

The blaze claimed the highest fire death toll in the country since 1990.

43 percent of Czech employees affected by coronavirus crisis

prague cz

About 43 percent of employees and 60 percent of self-employed persons in the Czech Republic have been affected by the coronavirus crisis, according to a survey published Monday by the Czech Statistical Office (CSU).

This means that the pandemic impacted roughly 1,868,000 employees and 514,000 self-employed persons in total, but most surveyed believed that this impact would be temporary, said the CSU survey.

“The prevailing view among workers is that the crisis may not last long. Only 18 percent of employees and 28 percent of affected entrepreneurs thought that the effects could not be overcome with the help of some support measure or government program,”

said Marta Petranova, head of the CSU Labor Force, Migration and Equal Opportunities Department.

However, the views of workers who have been job hunting since March — around 31,000 people in the second quarter of 2020 — are less optimistic. According to the CSU,

only four percent of newly laid-off workers said they could return to their original employer and 11 percent said their employer had closed down.

In addition, 29 percent of those job seekers found it difficult to find a job in their original field and seven percent saw their field as unpromising and would like to change fields.

prague cz
Read also43 percent of Czech employees affected by coronavirus crisis

Czech Republic to upgrade “smart quarantine” system

The Czech Republic is creating a “Health Risk Board” to oversee the country’s “smart quarantine” system, which intends to contact trace COVID-19 infections, officials said after a government meeting on Monday.

Health Minister Adam Vojtech, who has dismissed claims that his ministry had botched the implementation of the “smart quarantine” system, described the new board as a “supervisory body where we will all be at the same table.”

prague sunset
Read alsoCzech Republic reintroduces nationwide COVID-19 restrictions

On Sunday, Interior Minister Jan Hamacek said that the so-called “smart quarantine” system was not working properly and called on the army to be more involved.

The new board will be headed by Prime Minister Andrej Babis, and the Czech Army and the Ministry of Health will both be heavily involved, officials said at the press conference.

In addition, the Ministry of Health is introducing a new four-tiered system to rate the extent of infections in specific regions. From the lowest to the highest, the color codes for the tiers are white, green, yellow and red.

One person has died and at least 35 were injured in a collision of two trains Tuesday night near Cesky Brod, central Bohemia of the Czech Republic
Read alsoOne killed, 35 injured in train collision in Czech Republic

This so-called traffic light system will inform citizens of anti-epidemic measures they should expect to follow in their daily routines and will provide regional health officials with recommendations on how to manage their local epidemiological situation.

Czech Republic reintroduces nationwide COVID-19 restrictions

prague sunset

The Czech Republic announced Thursday new nationwide regulations to contain COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, after the country has seen a virus surge in recent weeks.

From midnight on Saturday, the wearing of masks in indoor public events for over 100 people will be mandatory. From Monday, indoor public events will be limited to 500 people, said Health Minister Adam Vojtech.

One person has died and at least 35 were injured in a collision of two trains Tuesday night near Cesky Brod, central Bohemia of the Czech Republic
Read alsoOne killed, 35 injured in train collision in Czech Republic

It will be possible for large events to designate structurally separate spaces for 500 participants each, so long as there are separate entrances and no intermingling occurs.

The reintroduction of such measures should not be considered a reaction to a “second wave” of the virus and therefore businesses should not be disrupted, the minister noted.

“We will not introduce any measures that would restrict the economy or the free movement of people. The measures taken are based on information from the regional hygienic stations according to their experience with new outbreaks,” Vojtech said.

prague sunset
Read alsoCzech Republic reintroduces nationwide COVID-19 restrictions

As of Thursday, the Czech Republic had registered 14,724 COVID-19 cases and 365 deaths.

Regiojet will start twice-daily service connecting Budapest, Vienna, Brno and Prague

regiojet railway service

Privately-owned Czech railway company RegioJet will start twice-daily service connecting Budapest, Vienna, Brno and Prague from July 31.

Hungary’s privately owned Continental Railway Solution will operate the Hungarian stretch of the service.

RegioJet will offer four travel classes on the trains: low-cost, standard, relax and business.

The cheapest one-way tickets will start at 9 euros for Budapest-Vienna and 16 euros for Budapest-Prague.

Ticket prices include reserve seating and access to broadband internet.

The trains will make stops at Déli and Kelenföld stations in Budapest, as well as at stations in Győr, Mosonmagyaróvár and Hegyeshalom, but they may not be used to reach domestic destinations.

As we wrote yesterday, Wizz Air has suspended flights from Budapest to several destinations in Ukraine and the Balkans for about a month, details here.

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Read alsoThings to know if you plan to come to Hungary

One killed, 35 injured in train collision in Czech Republic

One person has died and at least 35 were injured in a collision of two trains Tuesday night near Cesky Brod, central Bohemia of the Czech Republic

One person has died and at least 35 were injured in a collision of two trains Tuesday night near Cesky Brod, central Bohemia of the Czech Republic, according to local media reports Wednesday.

The accident happened at around 9:30 p.m. local time (1930 GMT) when a passenger train hit the end of a freight train on the line from Prague to Kolin, one of the major lines in the country, the Czech News Agency reported.

All the injured, including four severely, have been sent to hospitals,

emergency service spokeswoman Petra Effenbergerova was quoted by the agency as saying.

Minister of Transport Karel Havlicek arrived at the scene of the accident soon after and said

the cause of the accident was probably human failure.

“Most likely the driver passed the traffic light on the red light, even though it is a very well-secured track,” the news agency quoted Havlicek as saying.

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Read alsoAwful! Dozens of people injured at bicycle race accident in Hungary – VIDEO

Britain decides to exclude Huawei from its future 5G network

huawei 5g

Chinese technology company Huawei said Tuesday that the British government’s move to ban the company’s involvement in the country’s 5G networks is a “disappointing decision” which “threatens to move Britain into the digital slow lane, push up bills and deepen the digital divide.”

“This disappointing decision is bad news for anyone in the UK with a mobile phone,” said Ed Brewster, a spokesperson for Huawei UK in a statement.

“Instead of ‘levelling up’, the government is levelling down and we urge them to reconsider. We remain confident that the new U.S. restrictions would not have affected the resilience or security of the products we supply to the UK,” Brewster said.

The British government announced Tuesday that buying new Huawei 5G equipment will be banned after Dec. 31, 2020 and all Huawei equipment will be removed from 5G networks by the end of 2027.

“Regrettably our future in the UK has become politicized, this is about U.S. trade policy and not security,” said Brewster.

The British government announced in January its plans to safeguard the country’s telecoms network, approving a restricted role for Huawei in helping build the country’s 5G networks. Tuesday’s decision marks a U-turn in Britain’s policy concerning Huawei.

“We will conduct a detailed review of what today’s announcement means for our business here and will work with the UK government to explain how we can continue to contribute to a better connected Britain,”

said Brewster.

The latest decision by the British government is expected to delay the country’s 5G roll-out, according to Digital Secretary Oliver Dowden.

From an economic viewpoint, eliminating Huawei from Britain’s 5G infrastructure market could be expected to lead to higher prices and delays in roll-out, according to a recent report released by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, a research institute in Britain.

A previous study conducted by Oxford Economics and commissioned by Huawei also said that restricting Huawei from helping to build Britain’s 5G infrastructure market would increase roll-out costs by 9 percent to 29 percent.

“Outages would be possible” if BT is forced to pull out Huawei’s 5G kit too quickly, the telecoms operator’s chief executive Philip Jansen told BBC Radio 4’s Today program.

Depending on how big or how intrusive the work to be carried out is, users would lose their signal, “sometimes for a couple of days”,

Vodafone UK’s Head of Networks Andrea Dona, told British lawmakers last week.

The Chinese technology company has been operating in the British market for some two decades. It employs 1,600 people in Britain and supplies telecoms network equipment to all the major mobile and broadband service providers in the country, according to Huawei.

Recently, Huawei announced that it will build a state-of-the-art center in Cambridge, Britain, which will focus on the research, development and manufacturing of optical devices and modules.

Huawei to have services from Czech APP developer in new phones

The applications of the Czech internet leader Seznam.cz will be part of the offer in new Huawei phones sold in the Czech Republic, the company stated in a press release on Monday.

Chinese technology firm Huawei will offer List services, including news and search, through its AppGallery store, which has 400 million users per month.

“Huawei and Seznam.cz have agreed on partnerships and cooperation in many areas. Seznam.cz, as a major developer of many mobile applications in the Czech Republic, supports Huawei in building its own application store. The recently introduced P40, P40 Pro and P40 Lite phones are the first models, and we believe that our customers will appreciate it,”

Czech News Agency (CTK) quoted Filip Matys, Huawei’s product portfolio manager, as saying on Monday.

“Huawei mobile devices form a large part of the market in the Czech Republic. We are pleased to be able to work together to help us reach other users with List products. This is in line with our mobile strategy, which responds to the fact that consumption is increasingly moving entertainment and content from desktop to mobile phones,” said Matěj Hušek, director of content services at Seznam.

Huawei is building its own ecosystem AppGallery, where popular applications in the Czech Republic, such as Alza.cz and CZC, can be found.

Is Tesco leaving Hungary?

tesco hungary lake balaton

The stock market experts of London have been thinking a lot about the future of Tesco, and their prediction is: the supermarket will exit East-Central Europe.

Stock analysts from London believe that Tesco will eventually leave our region. There has been a lot of gossip about the Schwarz Group –including Lidl and Kaufland – taking over Tesco’s spots, reported Napi.

It was previously announced that Tesco is leaving Poland, and now Ken Murphy, the newly appointed CEO of Tesco, will review the remaining subsidiaries in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia and evaluate whether they will exit the region or continue to operate.

A possible buyer could be the Schwarz Group, and even though their PR office denied the gossip, there are things that point to the prediction of the British analysts being right, such as the fact that Dave Lewis – former CEO – denied Tesco leaving Poland several times before eventually having to sell to Salling Group due to Tesco financially doing very poorly there.

Salling Group paid 900 million zlotys (approx. €200 million) for the Polish subsidiary, which included the company’s headquarters there, 301 stores, and a distribution centre.

Dave Lewis has previously spoken about Tesco having to focus on how the supermarket’s stores do in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia, and that the selling of the Polish market should help this.

Vienna Five – Szijjártó: Austria successfully worked with eastern neighbours in protection

Vienna five

Austria and its eastern neighbours held several consultations during the novel coronavirus epidemic, and these successful talks helped the countries to institute effective protective measures, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Tuesday after meeting his Austrian, Czech, Slovak and Slovene counterparts.

At a joint press conference of the Vienna Five informal grouping, Szijjártó said

central European countries had successfully worked together to introduce protective measures against the virus, and they have decided to maintain their cooperation amid upsurges in several neighbouring countries.

Commenting on the upcoming EU summit, he urged the fair distribution of European Union resources in the next seven-year budget period. He said

richer states and countries that acted irresponsibly during the crisis by driving up their debts should not receive preferential treatment, he added.

Szijjártó said “it must not be allowed that EU funds get cheated from Hungary on a subjective basis”. The distribution of funds must be objective since Hungary has fulfilled all obligation criteria of receiving the funding due, Szijjártó said.

The aim of economic protection is clearly to protect jobs and create at least as many jobs as they have lost. This must be not only a Hungarian but also a European endeavour.

He noted that Hungary’s trade turnover with the other four Vienna Five states amounted to 34.5 billion euros last year, one-sixth of the country’s total foreign trade.

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FM Szijjártó: Central Europe to become ‘winner of new world order’

Central Europe has a good chance of becoming a winner in the new world order taking shape in the wake of the novel coronavirus epidemic, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said in Wadowice, in southern Poland, on Tuesday.

Speaking at the Visegrad Group meeting of foreign ministers, Szijjártó noted the solidarity exhibited by the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia during the pandemic. Despite the challenges, ties had strengthened, he added.

In the post-pandemic world, countries that offer investment-friendly economies will have a competitive edge,

he said. Companies may weigh optimising production ahead of reopening; they will be drawn to countries offering low taxes, political stability and good infrastructure, Szijjártó said.

The Visegrad countries have good foundations for that role and must maintain reasonable economic policies and a secure economic environment to become winners in the competition, he added.

The pandemic has also highlighted new arguments for EU enlargement, Szijjártó said.

If the bloc is to assume a position of power in the new world order, it will have to expand, he said, calling for the speedy integration of Serbia and Montenegro.

Foreign Ministers Jacek Czaputowitz of Poland, Tomas Petricek of the Czech Republic and Ivan Korcok of Slovakia have also attended the event.

Orbán: Visegrád Group concludes ‘good year’

orbán v4 meeting

The Visegrád Group is concluding a “good year”, and has handled the coronavirus epidemic successfully in comparison with other European countries, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in Warsaw on Friday.

Speaking at a joint press conference after a summit after Poland assumed the grouping’s rotating presidency on July 1, Orbán said the next task was to preserve jobs and restart economic growth.

The Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia have their budget deficits under control, Orbán said. Other countries, however, have amassed debts and “the question is whether we can help them”, he said.

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Read alsoVisegrad Group warns against defence cuts

Although Hungary generally opposes to EU member states taking out loans jointly, it has accepted the EU’s approach to help those states, he said.

The matter, however, is far from settled, he said: the member states need a “smart financial agreement” to be able to proceed.

As president of the Visegrád Group, Poland will play a key role in those negotiations, he said.

Orbán pledged Hungary’s full support to Poland in a period which he said would be defined by defeating the epidemic, restarting the economy and handling the migration crisis.

coronavirus hospital hungary
Read alsoCoronavirus and the Visegrád countries – Polish and Czech expectations

Orbán said he hoped that “economically minded” leaders will be elected everywhere to help their countries recover after the pandemic. He roots for US President Donald Trump, he said, “because he is the only one capable of getting the American economy in order after the pandemic”.

Hungary has “great trust” in the Polish presidency, as its leadership involves a “seasoned finance minister”, Orbán said.

Next to overcoming the pandemic and restarting the economy, the next period will also be characterised by more intensive migration, he said. Hungary is already detecting growing numbers of illegal entry attempts, while the number of people smugglers arrested has grown, and the number of Covid-19 cases has grown along migration routes, he said.

Regarding the EU’s recovery package, Orbán said the group is “standing united”. The recovery plan is covered from a loan taken out jointly by EU member states, he said. Since there are no net contributors and net beneficiaries, the distribution process will go differently from the EU’s normal budget, he said.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said the V4 wanted to help shape the EU’s post-coronavirus future, pointing out that the four countries had “solid economic foundations” and had proven how successful they could be in overcoming the epidemic. He also said the V4 held a common position on the handling of refugees and the protection of the bloc’s external borders.

V4 leaders stand for a flexible EU budget that the member states could tailor to their own needs, Morawiecki said.

The group will represent a joint standpoint at the July 19 EU summit, he said.

Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis said that the Visegrád countries will work for a fair 2021-2027 EU budget for all member states. It is important for the Visegrad states that Europe defeats the epidemic as soon as possible and its economy thrives again, he said. At the same time, the recovery fund set up to deal with the effects of the pandemic should cater for all nations’ economic needs, he said.

The V4 countries have a “vision” on how to make Europe stronger and more agile, Babis said. The European Commission should prioritise the EU’s internal market to overcome the post-pandemic crisis, and should work on concluding trade agreements with third countries, he said.

Slovak Prime Minister Igor Matovic said Poland was taking over the group’s presidency at trying times. The Visegrád Group and Europe have to stand together in a crisis unprecedented since world war 2, he said.