Foreign Affairs Ministry of Hungary

Hungarian foreign minister talked about a “red line” concerning Ukraine

Hungarian foreign minister talked about a red line concerning Ukraine

Admitting Ukraine to NATO would cross a Hungarian “red line” since this would lead to a third world war, the foreign minister said, briefing parliament’s foreign affairs committee on Thursday.

Ukraine’s NATO accession is crossing “red line”

The accession of Ukraine at war would lead to a direct confrontation between Russia and the alliance, Péter Szijjártó, said in response to MPs’ questions.

Several allies had encouraged Ukraine to believe in its prospective NATO membership, which he called “a humiliation of Ukraine” since in closed NATO sessions it was generally agreed that “this is not possible”.

Meanwhile, he said Hungary opposed military advisers from the European Union in Ukraine because sending them would lead to escalation.

Hungarian foreign minister talked about a red line concerning Ukraine
Péter Szijjártó. Photo: MTI

Also, he said Hungary rejected extending the review period of the sanctions against the Central Bank of Russia from six months to three years, because doing so would raise public expectations of a never-ending war “which we find unacceptable”.

The USA continues to trade with Russia

When it comes to punitive measures that may harm national interests, Hungary objects to sanctions on, for example, natural gas and nuclear fuel, adding that many slammed Hungary in this regard, yet European imports of Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) had grown by 11 percent in the first half of the year, while France alone had increased Russian LNG import volume by 110 percent.

Regarding Russian crude, he said Hungary vetoed the EU measure to ban crude imports, and Hungary, Slovakia and Czechia had won an exemption accordingly. Meanwhile, India, “if I recall correctly”, increased Russian crude oil imports twenty-fold, while Europe’s oil imports from India had tripled, he added.

Last year, Szijjártó said, the US continued to rely on Russian supplies of uranium, yet Hungary was accused of being pro-Russian in light of the project to expand its Paks nuclear power plant in which US, German, French, and Austrian subcontractors worked alongside Russian nuclear contractor Rosatom.

red line ukraine szijjártó hungarian parliament
Photo: FB/Szijjártó

Hungary’s foreign policy goals peace, sovereignty, economic neutrality, says Szijjártó

The primary goals of Hungary’s foreign policy are to promote peace, protect national sovereignty and preserve the country’s economic neutrality, Szijjártó said. Speaking at a hearing of parliament’s foreign affairs committee, Szijjártó said Hungary had been paying the price of the war raging in Ukraine for two and a half years.

“After a thousand days, the European political elite should realise that the question is not what we think about the war, because everyone knows that exactly; the question is how to ensure peace, or more precisely, which path will lead to peace the fastest,” he said. The minister said the pro-war stance followed so far had failed, and weapons deliveries had not brought the end of the conflict closer, so it would be time to give pro-peace policy a chance in order to avoid escalation and a direct confrontation between NATO and Russia.

He insisted that outside of the “transatlantic bubble”, pro-peace forces were in the majority, and Hungary was also part of this majority, even if those who held this position were called “Putin’s puppets or Kremlin propagandists” in Europe. Szijjártó went on to point to what he considered attempts to limit national sovereignty in many parts of the world, including Hungary.

The EU wants to say who and how should govern in Hungary

“Last week, we all had the chance to watch the debate in the European Parliament in Strasbourg, where the wish of who should be in government, who and how should govern in Hungary, was expressed more clearly and more shamelessly than ever before,” he said. “I believe that such an attempt at open intervention is unprecedented, even in the recent history of European politics, and must be rejected as firmly as possible. It is not up to international political actors, Manfred Weber or Ursula von der Leyen, to decide who governs in Hungary, but Hungarian voters,” Szijjártó added.

Finally, the minister touched on the issue of trade neutrality, reiterating that Hungary was against the formation of blocs and against launching a new trade “cold” war. Instead, was is interested in connectivity and creating trade ties, he said. He cited Hungary as an example of the growth potential held by civilised East-West cooperation, insisting the country had become a key hub for Eastern and Western economies thanks to its “pragmatic, patriotic foreign policy”.

Foreign minister presented economic neutrality policy to WTO deputy DG

Szijjártó presented the Hungarian government’s strategy of economic neutrality to World Trade Organization (WTO) Deputy Director-General Xiangchen Zhang in Geneva on Wednesday, his ministry said in a statement. In a post on social media after the meeting, Szijjártó said some of the biggest players in global politics and world trade had taken decisions that could lead to the outbreak of an “economic cold war”.

“This flies in the face of Hungary’s interests. The Hungarian economy is export-oriented, Hungarian companies are competitive at the international level, and their export performance is increasing from year to year, so it is in Hungary’s interest for world trade and the global economy to operate without impediment,” he added. “We have shown in recent years how much we can profit from a civilised cooperation between East and West,” he said, adding that Hungary had become a “meeting point” for investments from the East and West.

He pointed to the “unhindered cooperation” between German and Chinese automotive industry companies in Hungary and said the success of entire European economies depended on such cooperation. Szijjártó said the WTO deputy director-general had approved of Hungary’s strategy of economic neutrality, calling it “the right way”. That strategy produces economic growth, creates jobs and higher wages, Szijjártó added.

Read also:

  • Hungary’s railways left in the dust as government funnels billions into roads – read more HERE
  • PHOTOS show PM Orbán was key figure in first, ‘historic’ meeting of Patriots for Europe, demanded peace talks

Hungarian FM Szijjártó thankful for American FDI

Hungarian FM Szijjártó thankful for American FDI german chinese battery plants

Companies from the United States form the second-biggest group of investors in Hungary and play a “big role” in ensuring the country’s economic neutrality, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Péter Szijjártó said at a USHBC roundtable talk in Budapest on Thursday.

In a statement issued by his ministry, Szijjártó said the government was constantly working to improve conditions to draw more investments to Hungary. He acknowledged challenges in recent years, especially the impact of the war in Ukraine, which required a focus on bringing down inflation instead of spurring economic growth in 2023, but said Hungary was “back on track” and the government was ready to give “new impetus” to the economy.

“We want to achieve growth of between 3pc and 6pc next year,” he said, pointing to big investments in the pipeline, including new local manufacturing capacity of German car makers BMW and Mercedes, and plants of Chinese battery maker CATL and EV manufacturer BYD.

Hungarian FM Szijjártó thankful for American FDI
Photo: FB/Szijjártó

Adopting a strategy of economic neutrality, Hungary’s government aims to draw investments from all corners of the world, he added.

Hungary is meeting point for economies of East and West

Szijjártó said Hungary had become a kind of “meeting point” for the economies of the East and the West and spoke out against efforts to decouple those economies. He added that those efforts were “far from reality” as mutual dependence was increasing.

He noted that Hungary was one of just three countries in the world that was home to plants of all three premium German car brands, while it had also welcomed manufacturing capacity of five of the world’s top ten Asian battery manufacturers.

“For us, economic neutrality means that in Hungary, an American can work together with anybody, be they Chinese, Indian, Korean, Dutch or German. It doesn’t matter to us, as long as they follow the rules and want to invest here, it’s alright with us,” he said.

Read also:

Hungarian Foreign Minister: EU opens first stage of Albania accession negotiations – UPDATE

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The European Union has opened the first chapters of Albania’s accession negotiations, paving the way for a swift process ensuring the country’s membership, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, said in Luxembourg, where he attended the second intergovernmental EU-Albania conference.

Tuesday’s accession conference is the second held between the EU and Albania since it became a candidate country in 2014.

“This is historic,” he declared, noting that speeding up the EU integration of Western Balkan countries is a priority of the Hungarian EU presidency.

He said the bloc needed new momentum, which Western Balkan countries could provide.

“Urgent action is needed to preserve the credibility of the enlargement policy, so we must speed up enlargement procedures,” the minister added.

As we wrote on Friday, Albania views Hungary as a role model, the country’s prime minister said in Budapest after meeting Prime Minister Viktor Orbán for talks on Friday. Details HERE.

UPDATE

Most member states want merit-based enlargement, he said, adding that Albania’s merits in terms of the economy, politics and social issues were clear for all to see.

Szijjártó called it an “honour” that substantive negotiations with Albania have begun under the Hungarian presidency, adding that hopefully “we won’t have to wait until the next Hungarian presidency” before another country was able to join the EU.

He said Hungary pursued a responsible neighbourhood policy, adding that he was sharply aware of how the integration process could foster “peace, calm, developments and stability” in the region.

Olivér Várhelyi, the EU commissioner for enlargement and neighbourhood policy, told the same press conference that the EU and Albania were celebrating a “landmark moment” and the path of meaningful negotiations ahead was clear.

He added that thanks to Hungary’s presidency, it was now doubtless that enlargement was among the three key priorities for the EU and its leaders.

EU-Kazakh Cooperation Council meeting in Luxembourg: Hungary supports closer ties

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EU cooperation with Central Asia could reap huge rewards, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, said at an EU-Kazakh Cooperation Council meeting in Luxembourg on Monday, adding that Europeans had cottoned on to the region’s significance 10-12 years after the Hungarian government decided to intensify ties with the region.

Chairing the meeting, Szijjártó said that nobody any longer called in question Central Asia’s significance, but 14 years ago the Hungarian government had been slammed for building strong strategic relations with the region.

“I’m glad that … today everybody acknowledges the region’s significance,” he added, noting the new trade routes, energy security, and bulwark against terrorism that it provided.

“I believe that the freshness, the new energies and the new impetus the European Union needs can be won from your region,” Szijjártó said.

He said global energy networks were more and more burdened by the intensive use of heating and cooling systems as well as transport electrification, and nuclear energy was the safest, most sustainable and environmentally friendly way of meeting these needs.

The foreign minister noted that a recent national referendum held in Kazakhstan concerning the peaceful use of nuclear energy had paved the way to the construction of a nuclear power station in the country. “This could open new paths for energy cooperation with the EU as well,” he said.

“Our view is that the coming period must be about increased connectivity, and we firmly argue for this. I believe that cooperation between the EU and Central Asia could contribute to that goal,” the minister said.

At an earlier press conference, Szijjártó recalled that when the Hungarian government started to form ties with Central Asia in the early 2010s, “there were some who laughed at us and called our plan ludicrous, and there were others who heavily criticised us for political reasons. “Today those people and their successors are standing in line in Central Asia trying to build close cooperation.”

He noted that Kazakhstan, with the world’s second largest uranium reserves, is a leading uranium producer, and he argued that the EU would have to tap all kinds of international cooperation in order to harness the peaceful use of nuclear energy.

As we wrote a week ago, President of Kazakh parliament visits Hungary.

read also: Hungarian team proves at 5th World Nomad Games that we may be descendants of ancient steppe Nomad empires

Hungary draws red line: firmly opposes sending EU military advisers to Ukraine

ukraine

Hungary stands firmly against “the extremely dangerous proposal” to send EU military advisers to Ukraine, Péter Szijjártó said on Monday in Luxembourg.

Not to help Ukraine

This is a Hungarian red line, he told a press conference after a meeting of the European Union Foreign Affairs Council, adding that pressure to expand the mandate of the EU military training mission in Ukraine was strong.

“When the European Union started training Ukrainian soldiers, we constructively abstained, signalling our disagreement,” he said, arguing the plan was “dangerous” in view of the risk of escalation and deepening the conflict between the EU and Russia. He noted that Hungary had not prevented others doing so, however.

“But now they are calling for the European Union to delegate military advisers to Kyiv as part of this operation. Well, this goes beyond [our] red lines,” he said.

related article: Hungarian Foreign Minister says Russia’s 2021 security proposals to end Hungary’s NATO membership acceptable? Ria Novosti interview and denial – VIDEO

Now is the time for a pro-peace outlook to replace pro-war policy

The time has come to pursue a pro-peace policy instead of a pro-war approach, now that there is a general recognition in Brussels that Ukraine is beset by problems such as the risk of further escalation, the approaching winter and sanctions evasions, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, told a press conference after a meeting of the European Union Foreign Affairs Council in Luxembourg on Monday.

Szijjártó said much of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure had been destroyed as winter approached, more and more European companies were evading sanctions with the help of third countries, and fighting on the frontline was intensifying.

He said the pro-war approach had been tried for “a thousand days” and had failed, and now the pro-peace approach should be given a chance to succeed.

Brussels, meanwhile, wanted additional weapons shipments and new punitive measures. It even advocated using Western weapons against targets in Russia, he added.

Szijjártó decried those who saw champions of peace as a threat.

“Some argue that starting peace negotiations now would not be good when Ukraine is not doing well. Well, if Ukraine isn’t doing well, doesn’t this prove what we [advocate]?”

Meanwhile, asked about recent remarks made by Donald Trump concerning risk of escalation in Ukraine, he said the former president had been “absolutely right” that a confrontation between NATO and Russia was “growing every hour and minute of the day”.

A third world war, he added, could be prevented if the war in Ukraine was brought to an end. “That’s why we’re waiting until the American presidential election in a few weeks, because we think that the victory” of Trump would result in “change in international political life that will bring with it a greater hope for peace than ever before,” he said.

The minister added that in the absence of a new Trump administration, “we would have to prepare for a very difficult period in Europe and in central Europe. ”

Meanwhile, Szijjártó said the Friends of Peace international group established within the United Nations had drawn heavy criticism at the meeting, but Hungary continued to strongly back the initiative.

“I had expected there would be ad-hominem criticism,” he said, noting that Hungary was not the only EU member state to have attended the inaugural meeting in New York as France had also participated. “The French needed courage for this, and it’s apparent that more people couldn’t muster it up”.

Afterwards, criticism of Friends of Peace broadened and some even favoured attacking the group. However, he said Hungary still strongly supported its establishment at the UN and was ready to participate in its joint work.

He said the group’s statement backing territorial integrity, sovereignty, and the UN Charter “should be respected” and that it righted the criticisms that “our European friends have previously cataloged.”

Szijjártó also said pressure had again mounted to pay six billion euros from the European Peace Framework to EU member states supplying weapons to Ukraine, and Hungary strongly opposed the move.

But he welcomed a proposal by the EU’s foreign policy chief to make this voluntary, saying that Hungary has long argued that no one should be forced into an initiative they do not wish to participate in.

The minister said he had signalled Hungary’s support for the transition to voluntary funds. He added that Hungary could no longer be blamed for any lack of payments from the European Peace Framework.

As we wrote today, the Hungarian foreign minister condemned Kamala Harris for labeling Orbán an autocratic dictator. Details are HERE.

Hungarian delegation engages in strategic partnership talks in Chad

Daily News Hungary Logo Új

The foreign ministry said on Monday that a Hungarian delegation will be in N’Djamena, Chad, in the upcoming days to discuss the details of and the Hungarian government’s comprehensive role in the strategic partnership both sides signed in September.

The statement said the delegation is led by ministerial commissioner Laszlo Mathe and includes representatives of the Hungary Helps programme, the Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences (MATE), and the Hungarian armed forces.

The Hungarian government recognised in good time that the development, peace, and stability of Africa are key interests of Hungary and Europe as a whole. Illegal migration from the south supported by terrorists was one of the biggest security threats facing Europe, it added.

“From Hungary, we’re concerned to see the global spread of terrorist organisations, and this danger especially affects Africa, including the Sahel,” the ministry said.

The statement said it is important to handle problems at their origin. Migration cannot be stopped without cooperation with the Sahel, it added.

The ministry said Hungary is carrying out humanitarian development while offering support for peace and launching programmes that strengthen the stability of this region of Africa, with the aim of helping people stay in their place of birth.

It added that Hungary and Chad want to take concerted action against terrorism, and the strategic partnership agreement signed on September 9 serves this aim.

The common interests of Europe and the Sahel are also promoted under the arrangements of Hungary’s EU presidency, which is prioritizing the issue, encouraging all member states to get involved in humanitarian activities in the region. The Hungarian government has prompted the EU to transfer 14 million euros to develop Chad’s defence capacities from the European Peace Facility.

The Hungarian government is working on developing the diplomatic representation office in N’Djamena to the rank of an embassy to strengthen the efforts, the statement said.

read also:

Hungary launching 200 million euros tied aid in Chad

PM Orbán meets Chad president in Budapest

Hungary strengthens ties with Equatorial Guinea during first-ever ministerial visit

Hungarian Foreign Minister says Russia’s 2021 security proposals to end Hungary’s NATO membership acceptable? Ria Novosti interview and denial – VIDEO

szijjártó

Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó’s comments to the Russian state media have caused a significant stir. According to RIA Novosti, a Russian state news agency with close ties to the Hungarian government, Szijjártó suggested that Russia’s 2021 security proposals should have been negotiated by NATO, implying that Hungary’s NATO membership could have been reconsidered.

Máté Paczolay, spokesperson for the Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, responded in an interview with Telex, following the report by RIA Novosti.

Paczolay firmly rejected this interpretation, clarifying the foreign minister’s remarks. His response came after Telex enquired about the RIA Novosti article, which quoted Szijjártó as stating that NATO should have engaged with Russia’s proposed security guarantees before the conflict escalated. Although Paczolay did not explicitly mention RIA Novosti, it was clear he was referring to the Russian outlet.

The controversy stems from an interview Szijjártó gave to the Russian news agency. In the interview, he stated that war might have been avoided if NATO had engaged with Russia’s draft 2021 agreement on security guarantees before the situation deteriorated. He commented:

“I remember those days well. Unfortunately, it didn’t happen. Nearly three years have passed since then, and perhaps it’s no longer relevant, but I do wish those discussions had taken place. If they had, maybe we wouldn’t be in this situation now.”

At that time, Russian President Vladimir Putin had proposed a deal to the United States, which included NATO rolling back its infrastructure to pre-1997 levels and ensuring Ukraine would never join the alliance. In return, Putin claimed he would refrain from invading Ukraine. If accepted, this proposal would have meant that Hungary, which joined NATO in 1999, would not have hosted NATO forces or weapons.

In his interview, Szijjártó expressed regret that NATO did not engage with Putin’s demands, which many viewed as unreasonable and unrealistic. Had they been accepted, it would have left Hungary more vulnerable.

However, Paczolay clarified that Szijjártó’s remarks were not specifically about Russia’s 2021 security guarantees. Instead, he was referring to the pre-war period, suggesting that “real dialogue and genuine negotiations between the parties could have created an opportunity to avoid war.” Paczolay also stressed that Russia’s 2021 proposals are irrelevant in the current context.

Márton Tompos, an opposition politician from the Momentum party, strongly criticised the foreign minister’s remarks, writing:

The Hungarian foreign minister is a Russian agent. The Hungarian Foreign Ministry serves Russian interests. Hungarian NATO membership is in danger. There is nowhere to retreat. If you vote for Fidesz, you vote for Putin. Péter Szijjártó, get out of public life!

This incident marks the second time in recent weeks that the Hungarian government has faced backlash over its perceived closeness to Russia. Viktor Orbán’s strategist, Balázs Orbán, recently caused controversy by suggesting that President Zelensky should not have defended Ukraine so fiercely during the Russian invasion, claiming that the Hungarian government would not have acted similarly.

Details here: Official of Orbán cabinet says they would NOT have defended Hungary in case of a Russian invasion – UPDATED with PM Orbán’s reaction

As we wrote earlier today, the Hungarian Foreign Minister sent a strong message to America via the Russian state press, condemning Kamala Harris for calling Orbán an autocratic dictator. Read details HERE.

Hungarian foreign minister condemns Kamala Harris for labeling Orbán an autocratic dictator

Kamala Harris US

Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó has strongly criticised US Vice President Kamala Harris for her comments regarding Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Speaking to the Russian state news agency RIA Novosti, Szijjártó expressed his indignation:

“First of all, this is outrageous. It’s unacceptable to speak about my Prime Minister in such a manner. It shows a complete lack of respect for him and the Hungarian people,” he said.

During an interview on Wednesday, Kamala Harris, a Democratic presidential candidate, was asked about Donald Trump’s relationships with various world leaders, including President Vladimir Putin, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, Chinese President Xi Jinping, and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un. In response, Kamala Harris described them as:

“Dictators, autocrats, and people who could rightly be called killers.”

For several days, the Hungarian government refrained from officially responding to the remarks. This delay was in part due to Szijjártó’s busy schedule, as he was visiting Russia for the 11th time since the outbreak of the war, attending the International Gas Forum. Related article: Cooperation with Russian Gazprom ensures supply and great price for Hungary, foreign minister says in Russia

However, Szijjártó has now addressed the issue.

“We have always shown respect towards the American people and expect the same respect in return. Such statements reflect an utter lack of respect, which is unacceptable, especially between allies,” Szijjártó told RIA Novosti.

When asked whether Harris’s comments would affect Hungarian-American relations, Szijjártó warned that if she were to become the next president, it would not bode well for the future of bilateral relations.

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, along with Minister Szijjártó and the rest of the Orbán government, offered their full support to Donald Trump both during and before his campaign, prompting accusations of the Hungarian government interfering in the US election. Despite this, the Orbán administration frequently cautions other countries against meddling in Hungary’s internal affairs. It is also noteworthy that while the Hungarian government deems it crucial to maintain ties with Putin due to Russia’s global influence, the Biden administration, one of the world’s most powerful governments, has repeatedly clashed with and openly criticised the US President.

Read also: Orbán cabinet will continue to block EUR 45 billion loan scheme for Ukraine until the US elections

You can watch the Kamala Harris interview here:

 

Hungary has “increasingly close” ties with this authoritarian Asian country, says minister

Hungary has increasingly close ties with this authoritarian Asian country

Ties between Hungary and Kyrgyzstan have become increasingly close since Hungary started building relations with the fast developing central Asian region in good time, and has benefitted a lot from it already, Péter Szijjártó, the minister of foreign affairs and trade, said on Friday.

The ministry cited Szijjártó as saying on the occasion of the Kyrgyz president’s visit to Hungary that trade turnover between the two countries was record high last year, and had significantly grown this year.

Hungarian companies are increasingly successful in the Kyrgyzstan market, including in the areas of the health industry and pharmaceuticals, food processing and the sowing seed sector, he said.

Hungary has increasingly close ties with this authoritarian Asian country
Negotiations with PM Orbán and the Kyrgyz prime minister and his delegation. Photo: FB/Szijjártó

He welcomed the fact that a Kyrgyz-Hungarian development fund set up with 16 million dollars two years ago had successfully financed two joint investment projects in the machine industry and animal farming, adding that a hydropower investment project was currently being planned.

He said Hungary highly appreciated Kyrgyzstan’s role in the global fight against terrorism, and supported Kyrgyzstan’s application for non-permanent membership in the UN Security Council.

Szijjártó also said that both countries belonged to the global pro-peace majority as regards the war in Ukraine.

Read also:

  • Brussels favoured return of geopolitical blocs would, “cold trade war”, the Orbán cabinet believes – read more HERE
  • Hungary role model for Albania, says Albanian PM

Hungarian FM: First EU-Albania inter-governmental conference to be held next week

szijjártó hungary albania eu

The first EU-Albania inter-governmental conference will take place in Luxembourg next Tuesday, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, said on Facebook on Friday.

The conference that he will co-chair with Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama will mark the opening of the first Albanian accession chapters, heralding the real start of the country’s EU membership negotiations, he said, adding that this represented a “historic success” notched up during Hungary’s EU presidency.

“We have made speeding up EU enlargement the key goal of the Hungarian presidency; what’s more, Hungary has achieved this,” Szijjártó declared.

Read also:

Cooperation with Russian Gazprom ensures supply and great price for Hungary, foreign minister says in Russia – UPDATE: agreement signed

szijjártó russia gazprom supply

Hungary’s government sees ensuring the country’s long-term energy supply, at a competitive price, as the “task and duty” of the state, and both of these conditions are satisfied by its cooperation with Gazprom, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Péter Szijjártó said at the Saint Petersburg Gas Forum on Thursday.

Szijjártó said that the equivalent of 60% of Hungary’s annual gas consumption was already in storage facilities, thanks to a long-term delivery contract and supplementary commercial contracts. He added that while decision-makers in Brussels saw energy as an “ideological” matter, Hungary saw its energy supply as a matter of “physical reality” that depended on delivery infrastructure, too.

szijjártó russia gazprom supply
Szijjártó in Russia. Photo: Facebook/Szijjártó Péter

He said Hungary was satisfied with its energy cooperation with Russia and Gazprom, adding that deliveries had arrived on time, in compliance with contractual conditions, and agreements on additional volumes had also been reached.

“So far, nobody has made a better offer than our Russian partners. Nobody has offered cheaper or more reliable sources. So my question is, why should we switch,” he said.

Szijjártó said the expiry of the agreement on the transit of Russian gas via Ukraine would not be a problem for Hungary, as the country now gets most of its Russian gas through the TurkStream pipeline. He added that the pipeline, which runs from Russia through Turkiye, Bulgaria and Serbia, could serve as an alternative delivery route for other countries in Central Europe, too.

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Photo: Facebook/Szijjártó Péter

Fielding questions, he said Hungary’s fair partnership with Gazprom was a guarantee of secure supply and a competitive price. He noted that Hungary had signed a 15-year supply contract with Gazprom in 2021, while supplemental commercial contracts ensured a competitive price. He added that the next such contract would be signed later on Thursday.

Hungary will get 6.7bn cubic metres of gas this year, and next year, it will buy as much as can be accommodated by its full capacity in the TurkStream, he said. He acknowledged “political pressure” regarding Hungary’s energy supply, but said the government’s job was “not to yield to pressure, but to ensure the country’s secure supply”. He called out Western European states for “hypocrisy”, pointing to increased volumes of LNG at their ports as well as deliveries of crude through Indian middlemen.

szijjártó russia gazprom supply
Photo: Facebook/Szijjártó Péter

UPDATE: Hungary, Gazprom sign agreement on secure, favourably-priced gas

State-owned Hungarian energy group MVM and Russia’s Gazprom have signed a supplementary commercial contract that will ensure the continued delivery of Russian gas at a competitive price, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Péter Szijjártó said in a post on social media on Thursday.

It is the government’s task and duty to ensure that Hungary’s energy supply is secure in the long term and that it pays a competitive price, allowing regulated utility prices for households to be maintained, Szijjártó said. He noted that Hungary had signed a 15-year supply contract with Gazprom in 2021, while supplemental commercial contracts ensured a competitive price. The contract signed on Thursday is the continuation of that practice, he added.

Read also:

New Unilever factory to be built in Hungary

Unilever factory in Hungary

Unilever Magyarország will build a HUF 30bn deodorant factory in Nyírbátor (Northeast Hungary), Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Péter Szijjártó announced on Wednesday.

The government is supporting the investment, which will create 100 jobs, with HUF 3.9bn, Szijjártó said. He added that more than 90pc of the plant’s output would be exported.

Szijjártó noted that UK companies formed the seventh-biggest group of foreign investors in Hungary and employed more than 50,000 people in the country.

Unilever factory in Hungary
Unilever expansion in 2023. Photo: FB/Szijjártó

In a statement, Unilever said the plant would start production in the first half of 2026. It will turn out 150m units of deodorant a year on three production lines. The deodorant will be exported to Czechia, Romania, Poland, Slovakia, Ukraine and Greece.

Unilever Magyarország had net sales revenue of HUF 135bn in 2023. The company employs nearly 1,300 people.

Read also:

  • Good news from the Hungarian economy: National Bank prepared to protect the Forint, inflation likely to fall – read more HERE

FM Szijjártó: We have again completed a successful evacuation operation

slovakia evacuation lebanon hungarians

Hungary has successfully concluded an evacuation operation with the help of its Slovak friends, the minister of foreign affairs and trade said on Saturday afternoon, adding that the details are being disclosed only now as that is the general rule for security reasons.

In a post on Facebook, Péter Szijjártó noted that the plane Slovakia dispatched to Lebanon as part of the operation left that country’s air space with nine Hungarian citizens and a Lebanese family member on board in the morning hours on Saturday.

“The plane landed first in Cyprus and in these moments is in Bratislava, so all of them are now safe,” he said, noting that in an operation earlier, at the beginning of August, several Hungarians wanting to leave Lebanon had been taken home with a plane of the Hungarian armed forces.

“With a view to the escalation of the situation in the Middle East, this time we again offered our help to all Hungarians staying in Lebanon, ten of whom registered themselves, so we and our Slovak friends have agreed that they would ensure seats to the Hungarians on their plane,” the foreign minister said.

“Such a cooperation is not unprecedented since we, whenever possible, always offer seats on our evacuation flights to neighbouring countries and EU member states who generally use the possibility,” he said.

Szijjártó said in the recent operation the evacuation of the Hungarians carried out by Slovakia had been coordinated by Hungary’s diplomatic mission in Beirut. Hungary’s consuls were there in Larnaca and Bratislava to meet them and provide them every assistance, he said.

Pointing out the risk of the situation’s escalation in the Middle East, the foreign minister asked Hungarian citizens to avoid travelling to the region.

Read also:

Hungary wants to speed up the EU accession of the Western Balkans, says FM Szijjártó in Bosnia

Hungarian government Szijjártó and Dodik Western Balkans

Peace and stability in the Western Balkans is in Hungary’s national interest, and the government is working at full force to speed up the European Union accession of countries in the region, the foreign minister said on Friday.

Regional stability important

The ministry cited Péter Szijjártó as telling a joint press conference with Milorad Dodik, president of Republika Srpska, that the importance of regional stability and calm was continually growing in the current era of dangers.

He said that Hungary, in line with its responsible neighbourhood policy and also in its capacity as the current president of the European Council, was working to speed up EU enlargement.

“We believe the EU needs the Western Ballans because we need the freshness, dynamism and new impetus that could come from the region,” he added.

Hungarian government Szijjártó and Dodik Western Balkans
Szijjártó and Milorad Dodik, the leader of the Bosnian Serbs. Stronger together. Source: FB/Szijjártó

Szijjártó said it was disappointing that the candidate countries of the region had been waiting for accession for more than 14 years.

It is important that EU members and Brussels institutions should respect the decisions of Western Balkans residents, he said, adding that every nation has the right to decide about its own future and decide its leaders.

“As a result, we continue cooperation on the grounds of mutual respect with Western Balkans countries, including Bosnia-Herzegovina, and with the two entities in the country,” he said. “We continue to oppose that certain western European countries lecture and threaten Western Balkan leaders and they even bring up the prospect of introducing sanctions,” he added.

Successful cooperation

He praised the success of cooperation between Hungary and Republika Srpska.

As a result of a joint agricultural tender, farmers in Republika Srpska carried out more than 40 million euros worth of investment, which involved purchasing 4,700 pieces of agricultural equipment from 54 Hungarian companies, he said.

“In line with an earlier agreement, Hungarian companies joined three important development projects that were originally going to be financed by various German banks and institutions,” he said. “After the Germans have practically exited these projects, Hungarian companies are going to build a solar park, a wind farm and a waste water treatment plant in Republika Srpska,” he added.

Hungary friend of Republika Srpska, says Hungarian foreign minister

Hungary is a friend of Republika Srpska and continues to be ready for cooperation in all issues that help the development, stability and peace of Republika Srpska, the foreign minister said in Banja Luka on Friday.

The ministry cited Szijjártó addressing a campaign closing event of President Milorad Dodik, stating that Hungary was also a friend of Republika Srpska because of many common characteristics, such as the great pressure that most countries must endure.

“Those that exert the pressure do not respect us, they want something bad to us, they want to interfere in our domestic affairs, and they question our nation’s ability to make decisions about our own future,” he said.

“We know their methods, they threaten us, introduce sanctions and give financial resources to our enemies,” he added.

Current era of dangers

“It is important to resist the pressure and threats. It is important that we stand up for our own interests, because failing to do that, someone else will surely do it,” he said.

Szijjártó said that in the current era of dangers, it was important to have such important anf strong leaders as Milorad Dodik, who stands up for the interests of Bosnian Serbs.

“It is thanks to Milorad Dodik that strategic cooperation has developed between Hungary and Republika Srpska,” he said.

Under the arrangements of this cooperation, a programme to support agricultural businesses in Republika Srpska has been launched, resulting in developments totalling 40 million euros, he said.

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FM Szijjártó: Hungary doesn’t want EU to send military advisers to Ukraine

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Hungary rejects a new European Union proposal to deploy military advisers in Ukraine to coordinate training as it carries the risk of escalating the war, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, said on Wednesday.

He noted that late in 2022 the EU decided to train Ukrainian soldiers in the territory of EU member states, and he noted that Hungary decided against providing soldiers or funding for it, and it rejected training missions on Hungarian soil.

He said that at the same time, Hungary had not tried to prevent other member states from taking part in the initiative. But since then “an extremely dangerous proposal” has been advanced on sending military advisers to Ukraine to carry out coordination tasks in addition to extending the mission’s two-year mandate, Szijjártó said, adding this carried the risk of escalating the war.

“It’s perilous for Hungary, too, as escalation … first takes place in the neighbourhood, not thousands of kilometres away,” he added. “We cannot support the proposal in its current form,” he said, noting that Hungary has requested a revision of it.

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Foreign ministry calls on Hungarians to leave Lebanon

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The foreign ministry is calling on Hungarian citizens to leave Lebanon in the current war situation, the ministry said in a statement on Wednesday.

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The site of an Israeli missile impact in the Dahiye neighbourhood of the Lebanese capital on 2 October 2024. Photo: MTI/AP/Haszan Ammar

In the coming period, in case of an emergency, the embassy will be able to help most quickly those Hungarians who register for consular protection, the statement added.

Registration can be made online at https://konzinfo.mfa.gov.hu.

“We highly recommend that everyone leave the country without delay with any commercial flights that still operate and to encourage those compatriots who are on temporary stay to do the same,” the statement said.

The ministry also recommends that people regularly consult the consular service’s website which offers continually updated travel advice and download the Konzinfo Utazom mobile app for up-to-date information.

Official: Hungary grants emergency aid for internally displaced people in Lebanon

The government is providing 100,000 euros in emergency aid through the Hungary Helps humanitarian programme for helping internally displaced people in Lebanon, the state secretary for aiding persecuted Christians said on Wednesday.

Hungary is following with concern the escalation in the Middle East which is now expanding into southern Lebanon, Tristan Azbej said in a video on Facebook.

“Our Lebanese partners are reporting a deepening crisis in the country: hundreds of thousands are fleeing to the north, leaving their homes behind,” Azbej said. “Their accommodation has not been resolved, with masses of people having to stay in the open air without supplies, medicine or food. Many in Lebanon are in a critical situation.”

He said the government was responding to the situation by extending 100,000 euros in emergency aid through the Hungary Helps Programme.

“This is how the Hungarian government is contributing to the protection of internally displaced people in Lebanon through the Lebanon branch of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and other Christian organisations,” the state secretary said.

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Hungarian government continues to promote soonest possible EU enlargement

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Hungary continues to promote European Union (EU) enlargement as soon as possible because the community has been in great need of new impetus and dynamism, which the accession of Western Balkans countries could provide, the foreign minister said in Berlin on Tuesday.

Péter Szijjártó told a Berlin Process foreign ministers’ meeting that among “the current turbulent changes,” the EU needs freshness and new energy to stop its decrease in competitiveness and overcome the challenges.

“We believe the Western Balkans is the place from where this new inspiration and new impetus could come,” he said. “This is why we put enlargement at the top when we compiled the programme of Hungary’s EU presidency,” he added. He condemned that candidate countries from the region had been waiting for eleven years and five months on average for accession and their request for candidacy had been submitted more than fifteen years ago.

“It is obvious that if we do not make progress in this process, it will hurt the credibility of the EU’s enlargement policy,”

he said. Szijjártó added that his EU counterparts would frequently talk about the importance of a merit-based process but the failure to make progress would actually show that this principle was being neglected. “It is very obvious that despite the good performance of the candidates, the enlargement process is not moving ahead,” he said.

He said it was during Hungary’s previous EU presidency that the EU was last time enlarged, when Croatia’s accession process was successfully finalised.

“In the next three months of Hungary’s presidency, the EU will hold inter-governmental conferences with the five candidate countries from the Western Balkans, at least this is our definite goal,” he said.

The foreign minister said that the soonest inter-governmental conference can be held with Albania in mid-October, where the first group of chapters can be opened for talks. Szijjártó added Serbia was a key state for the region and it was therefore unavoidable and extremely important to make progress in its integration process. “An indispensable element of this is to hold an intergovernmental conference also with Serbia,” he said, adding that “we believe that the third group of chapters needs to be opened with Serbia”.

Commenting on Montenegro, he said chapters could even be closed in the case of that country, not only opened. “Montenegro has been performing well, at least four chapters could be closed,” he added.

Szijjártó said consultations with Bosnia and Herzegovina were on going and the country was also performing well.

He expressed regret that certain EU members were blocking the accession process for North Macedonia. “North Macedonia deserves progress, and therefore it is important to hold a political inter-governmental conference in the next three months.”

As we wrote before, PM Orbán said that North Macedonia should already be an EU member state.

read also – VSquare: Hungary acts as middleman for China’s EUR 500 million loan to Orbán’s Balkan allies

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Hungary can help restart dialogue among world powers, says Minister Szijjártó in Berlin

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Hungary news – Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said in Berlin on Tuesday that Hungary and its “honest politics” can help reopen communication among world powers and build an era of connectivity, preventing the re-emergence of geopolitical blocs.

Hungarians “lost forty years of our lives” after the country found itself “on the wrong side” of the previous world order, Szijjártó said in a panel discussion at the Berlin Global Dialogue forum, according to a ministry statement, adding that Hungary was “extremely concerned” by recent global developments.

He said Hungary’s main goal now is to contribute to international efforts to prevent the re-emergence of blocs.

He said the Hungarian government’s interests lay in connectivity, and expressed regret that certain world powers today were not even willing to talk to each other.

Szijjártó said

smaller countries could help the major powers build bridges among themselves.

He warned of the risks posed by the absence of talks between the United States and Russia, as well as of a potential US-China trade war.

read also: Hungary rejects EU’s punitive tariffs on Chinese EVs

The minister underlined the importance of honesty, saying his European Union counterparts often assured him of their support but “cannot afford” to express it publicly because of the domestic political situation in their countries.

“I think that a major luxury we have in Hungary is political stability, and based on that political stability, the luxury of honesty; that we do what we say and we say what we think,” he added.

“And if we continue like this, I … believe that we can be of assistance to the big countries in restarting communication with each other and building the era of connectivity,” Szijjártó said.

He underscored Hungary’s success in becoming a key meeting point for Eastern and Western businesses. He noted that Hungary is home to manufacturing bases of all three big premium German car makers, while five of the world’s ten biggest Eastern battery makers are present in the country.

Szijjártó said Hungary had successfully established a “Berlin-Beijing-Seoul trade and economic cooperation area centred in Hungary”.

He said this made it hard to understand why Germany’s foreign minister favoured “decoupling and de-risking” the EU economy from China when German businesses relied heavily on Eastern suppliers and often urged Hungary to secure such investments.

Szijjártó said Hungary has added 1 million jobs since 2010, has the lowest tax rates in Europe and has broken investment records each year since 2014.

read also: Hungarian government certain that Trump will bring peace

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