Middle East

Hungarian government strengthens education relations with Iraq

hungary iraq education ties

Boglárka Illés, the foreign ministerial state secretary for bilateral relations, and Naim Abed Yasser, Iraq’s minister for higher education and scientific research, signed a cooperation agreement in Budapest on Friday aimed at bolstering bilateral education relations.

Illés told a press conference after the signing that under the agreement, Hungary will offer higher-education scholarships to 100 Iraqi students between 2025 and 2027 as part of the Stipendium Hungaricum programme.

Abed Yasser said Iraq will also offer scholarships to Hungarian students, adding that they trusted that the student exchange programme would act as a “cultural bridge” between the two countries and have a positive effect on economic relations.

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Hungarian foreign minister: the EU should contact President Bashar al-Assad

EU should contact Bassar al-Assad

Lebanon is key to maintaining stability and avoiding escalation in the Middle East, and the EU and the international community should do everything in their power to keep it out of the war, the minister of foreign affairs and trade said after meeting with his Lebanese counterpart, Abdallah Bou Habib, in Budapest on Friday. He also said that the EU should contact Bassar al-Assad or his government to end the refugee crisis and restore security.

The war in Ukraine and the danger of the Middle Eastern conflict spreading to other countries are presenting grave challenges to Europe, Peter Szijjarto told a joint press conference.

“We know perfectly well that if the security crisis in the Middle East spreads to one more country, it won’t stop at its borders but widen into a regional or even greater war,” he said.

That would put Europe in a dire security situation, “those still hanging on to the reins would then lose all control,” he said.

Lebanon is a key ally in that fight, and Hungary is urging the EU to pay the 15 million euros earmarked for the country in the European Peace Facility. “We would finally spend the Peace Facility on peace,” he said.

He said he hoped that all parties would now adhere to bilateral and international decisions.

The 180,000 internally displaced people in southern Lebanon and northern Israel should be enabled to return home as soon as possible, he said.

Foreign minister Szijjártó: the EU should contact Bashar al-Assad or his government

Lebanon’s stability is also key to containing illegal migration, as it is currently housing more than 1.5 million refugees, he said. “Should Lebanon not take care of those people … they would almost certainly leave for Europe. And we all know the effect they would have on Europe’s stability and future.”

The world had left Lebanon to its own devices in dealing with the problem, which was “not fair”, he said, calling on the international community to ensure that those refugees return to Syria, certain areas of which had become much safer in recent years.

“We are calling for the EU to give up this section of its failed foreign policy. I have been a foreign minister for ten years, I have listened to various foreign ministers and high representatives … saying we should not contact the Syrian government or President Bashar al-Assad.”

EU should contact Bassar al-Assad
Photo: Creative Commons CC BY 4.0

“In the past ten years, I have been the only one to stay [in power] in Europe, and President Assad is also there. So maybe we should review the strategy and start providing economic aid rather than setting conditions, so that security can be restored and refugees sent back to Syria,” he said.

Should the problem go unsolved, Lebanon’s stability would be at risk “and Europe would sooner or later have to pay the price”, he said.

Hungary will continue to maintain a contingent of 16 troops in the UN mission on the Israel-Lebanon border, he added.

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Hungary on side of peace in Iraq

Hungary on side of peace in Iraq

The Hungarian government “has a vision of Europe that supports peace and stability, not only in its immediate vicinity but for example in Africa and the Middle East,” Tristan Azbej, Hungary’s state secretary in charge of assistance to Christian communities worldwide, told MTI from Stuttgart by phone on Wednesday.

The state secretary attended the opening of events commemorating the 2014 genocide of Iraqi Christians and Yazidis committed by the terrorist Islamic State, and said “in each case we must support peace rather than escalation.” He said “people in crisis zones should be helped to stay in their homelands rather than promote migration”.

Azbej said he had been invited by Yazidi survivor and Nobel Peace Prize winner Nadia Murad to represent the Hungary Helps programme. He noted that the Hungarian government had helped Iraq’s Yazidi community with a total 1.1 million euros in the past six years, apart from the humanitarian and reconstruction programmes provided to that country.

The Yazidi genocide claimed 5,000 lives, with 6,000 young women being captured and subjected to sexual slavery, he said, adding that some 500,000 people fled their homes and 150,000 were still “living from day to day” as internally displaced people.

“Commemorating the genocide is also aimed to save those people from continued persecution and discrimination,” Azbej said.

Szijjarto in phone talks with Iranian counterpart

Foreign Minister Peter Szijjártó spoke with Iran’s new acting foreign minister, Ali Bagheri Kani, by phone on Thursday, on the occasion of Hungary’s assuming the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union in July for six months. Bagheri Kani was appointed after his predecessor, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, had been killed in a helicopter crash in May, Szijjártó said on Facebook.

He said the he and Bagheri Kani were in agreement on the need to intensify dialogue between the EU and Iran, arguing that “diplomacy isn’t about limiting dialogue to those with whom you agree on everything”. The minister said they hoped that discussions between the EU and Iran could help avoid an escalation of the situation in the Middle East. Szijjártó warned that if the Middle East crisis were to spread to other countries, it would threaten global security, “and we who have been living in the shadow of a war for two and a half years now don’t want another global security crisis.”

Szijjártó added that he and Bagheri Kani had agreed to stay in constant contact and speak in person on the sidelines of the next UN General Assembly in New York.

Read also:

  • Hungarian government official in Iraq helps local Christian communities
  • Thanks to Hungary’s support, Benedictine monastery rebuilt in Norcia elevated to abbey rank

Hungary donating EUR 10 m to advance peace process in Syria

eu syria

Hungary is donating nearly 10 million euros with the aim of advancing peace in Syria and helping Syrian refugees return to their homeland, the state secretary in charge of aid to persecuted Christian communities said on Facebook on Tuesday.

Speaking on the sidelines of an international conference held in Brussels on support to Syria and to countries accommodating Syrian refugees, Tristan Azbej said he was promoting the Hungarian government’s “pro-peace and anti-migration position and solidarity with persecuted Christians” at the conference.

He said Hungary’s position urging the international community to do everything to ensure that Syrian refugees could return had been shared by Lebanon and other neighbours of Syria.

“Western proposals under which refugees and migrants would stay in other countries without limits are dangerous and unacceptable,”

Azbej said, arguing this would seriously burden the recipient country and enhance risks for them.

Azbej noted that the nearly 80 participants of the conference did not include any religious leaders from the Middle East. “Not only is it pointless to discuss Syria’s future without religious players, without the churches; it is also impossible to make peace and help the most vulnerable,” he said.

Hungary has previously helped “those suffering in Syria” with a donation off 25 million euros and will continue promoting stability in the region, helping Christian communities and contributing to the prevention of migration, he said.

Azbej said the Hungarian donation includes health equipment for Egypt to help with services delivered to Syrian refugees, as well as a contribution to humanitarian programmes in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Iraq in coordination with Christian partner organisations.

read also:

  • Hungarian government continues to be ready to contribute to intl humanitarian aid – details HERE
  • Orbán cabinet official in Iraq helps local Christian communities, details HERE

Hungarian government official in Iraq helps local Christian communities

Iraq Christian communities

The work of the Hungary Helps programme is bearing fruit and Christian communities are being reborn in northern Iraq, Azbej Tristan, the state secretary for aiding persecuted Christians, said on Saturday in a post on Facebook during a visit to Zakho.

The state secretary was participating at the consecration ceremony of the Saint Mary Church and community centre of the Armenian Apostolic Church, which was built with Hungarian support.

Azbej said the Hungary Helps programme has provided a 750,000 euro grant for the construction of the building complex that includes a church with 300 seats, classrooms and a parish office. Azbej noted that Supreme Patriarch Karekin II had requested help for the construction of the church.

Hungary helps
Hungary helps also present in Africa. Photo: FB/Azbej Tristan

The state secretary also noted that Hungary has provided 21 humanitarian and development grants to Iraq since 2016, helping to care for people fleeing war and Islamic State, rebuilding churches, residential buildings and schools, as well as helping make repairs to water supplies and agricultural facilities damaged during the war.

Read also:

  • Hungary will teach the United Nations how to protect persecuted Christians?

Iran beyond Persians: relations between azerbaijani turks and kurds

iran

Iran, a vast and diverse nation in the Middle East, is characterized by its large ethnic and linguistic minorities.

Approximately half of the country’s population comprises non-Persian ethnic groups. Among these groups, Azerbaijani Turks and Kurds stand out as the second and third-largest ethnic communities in Iran, respectively. Turks predominantly inhabit the northwest, particularly the four provinces (Ardabil, Zanjan, East, and West Azerbaijan) collectively known as Iranian Azerbaijan, while Kurds primarily reside in the western regions of the country. However, beneath this cultural diversity lie simmering tensions exacerbated by a myriad of socioeconomic, environmental, and political factors. Economic difficulties, regional disparities, environmental issues, and human rights abuses have all contributed to the emergence of complexities in ethnic relations and inter-ethnic conflict in Iran in recent years.

Being the most populous minority in the country and adhering predominantly to Shia Islam, which is the official religion of the Islamic Republic, Azerbaijani Turks are mainly viewed as the most well-integrated non-Persian community in Iran. However, linking this integration success only to religion is a simplistic view, since the historical background of the Turks’ attitude toward Iranian identity provides us with valuable insights. Iran has gained its modern-day identity and societal structure through the establishment of the Safavid Empire, which made Shiism the state religion and converted the majority of the population residing there to this confession. Back then, Iran used to be the ‘scientific center’ for Sunnism, the most widespread sect of Islam, which was changed by the Safavids seeking to generate a common idea to support their reign through generations, on which they were decisively successful. Although Safavids and other dynasties following them were usually labeled as the Persian Empire by Western academia due to the fact that Iran was historically called Persia, the founding elite of those empires (Safavid, Afsharid, and Qajar) had mainly consisted of Azerbaijani-Turkish nomadic tribes. Therefore, it is no coincidence that the Safavid Empire was founded in Iranian Azerbaijan, more exact to say, in Ardabil. Besides, for a quite long time (till the Pahlavi era), Tabriz (center of Iranian Azerbaijan) was considered the second capital of the empire, if not the actual capital in the early 16th century, and had nicknames such as Valiahdneshin (residence of Qajar Crown Prince), and City of Firsts, for the pioneering role of the city during the early modernization of Iran.

While this special place Turks enjoyed ceased after the enthronement of Reza Shah Pahlavi, and his and his son’s pursuit of Persian nationalism by discriminating and trying to assimilate the minorities, it is enough for the majority of this community to feel as the major element of the Iranian society partaking in the very foundation of the Iranian state. Active participation of Iranian Azerbaijani regions in the Islamic Revolution and the following Iran-Iraq war (Ardabil had the second-highest rate of fallen soldiers only behind Isfahan) strengthened these invisible ties. This makes the research of the discrimination against Turks in Iran more challenging, since the center-periphery dichotomy between Persian and minority-inhabited provinces gets obscure. Nevertheless, it is not so hard to detect the explicitly discriminatory practices against Turks, such as the lack of education in the mother tongue, pejorative stereotypes among Persians, persecution of activists, careless reaction of the government toward the ecological crises happening in Iranian Azerbaijan (the situation with Lake Urmia is the most obvious example), rising poverty hitting Turks and other minorities unequally, and so on. The policies aimed at the assimilation of Azerbaijani Turks, firstly introduced by Pahlavis, aren’t lifted totally, and Azerbaijani Turkish continues to be treated as a second-level language with no use in state institutions. Not only the ethnic topics, but also the worsening economic situation, which in turn forces people to migrate to bigger, mostly Persian-dominated cities, where minorities tend to be Persianized after one or two generations, are quite threatening for Turks and this threat makes them behave more cautiously about preserving their ethnic identity. That’s why Iranian Azerbaijan is viewed as the ‘last bastion of Turkish identity,’ where Persianization policies couldn’t succeed. Although the main power threatening Turkish identity here appears to be the central government dictating Persian, the increase in the number of Kurds, mostly due to natural growth or economic migration, can sometimes be understood as the most imminent ‘attack to the Azerbaijani bastion’. This conflict of interests between Turks and Kurds occur mainly in West Azerbaijan province, where the majority consists of Turks with a sizable Kurdish minority residing mainly in mountainous areas close to the border, but the same tendency can be observed in East Azerbaijan and Ardabil, too, although to a much lesser extent.

As one of the largest minority groups in the country, Kurds residing in Iran have endured prolonged and systematic discrimination. Their access to social, political, and cultural rights has been severely curtailed, along with their economic opportunities. Regions predominantly inhabited by Kurds have been neglected in terms of economic development, leading to widespread poverty. Evictions and demolitions of Kurdish homes have further exacerbated housing insecurity among the community. Additionally, authorities restrict parents from giving their babies Kurdish names, while efforts to incorporate the Kurdish language into education face continuous obstacles. Religious minority groups also face targeted measures aimed at marginalizing them, with Sunni Kurds facing particularly acute discrimination. A discriminatory selection process known as the “gozinesh” system imposes allegiance to Islam and to the Islamic Republic as a prerequisite for employment and political engagement, and is also used to discriminate against minority groups, such as Kurds, from equal participation in these spheres. Despite limited concessions such as occasional use of the Kurdish language in media and respect for certain aspects of Kurdish culture like traditional attire and music, activists advocating for Kurdish rights often face heightened persecution when they tie their advocacy to their ethnic identity. Kurdish individuals involved in human rights activism, community organizing, and journalism are frequently subject to arbitrary arrests and legal prosecution. Others endure torture, unfair trials in Revolutionary Courts, and even death sentences. These systematic violations not only suppress Kurdish voices but also reinforce their socio-economic marginalization within Iranian society.

The economic challenges faced by both Turks and Kurds play a significant role in exacerbating tensions between these communities. As a result of these economic difficulties, many Kurds are compelled to migrate from their impoverished rural homelands to urban centers, including Turkish-majority cities such as Urmia, Tabriz, and Ardabil, in search of better economic opportunities. This influx of Kurdish migrants into Azeri-majority areas has sparked tensions, as local Turks perceive them as economic competitors and resent their growing presence. The government of Iran has exploited these tensions for its own political ends, particularly in regions where Azerbaijani Turks and Kurds coexist, such as West Azerbaijan. By exacerbating divisions between these ethnic groups, the government seeks to consolidate its power and deepen mistrust and animosity between Turks and Kurds. Lack of control over Kurdish militant groups and higher firearm ownership (despite being illegal) among Kurds, on the one hand, and prioritizing Azerbaijani Turks over Kurds when recruiting civil servants and officers due to religious reasons (since Turks are mainly Shia), escalate the existing tensions and put it in a systematic, state-orchestrated way.

While finding a sustainable reconciliation formula for the conflicts between the ethnic groups that have coexisted for centuries is never easy, focusing more on common struggles like assimilation policies and persecution led by the central government might be the correct way for both Kurds and Turks to proceed. Segmentation can be the biggest obstacle hindering a unified response to the repressive government. This might be partially explained by the trend of self-alienation among Kurdish political circles from the common Iranian opposition by primarily pursuing Kurdish interests instead of cooperating with other oppositionists. The latest example of this phenomenon was the March 1 elections in Iran, where, for the first time in history, more Kurdish delegates were elected in West Azerbaijan than Turkish ones (7 to 5), largely due to the active participation of Kurds in the election, and in contrast, a boycott campaign among Turks like other Iranians. This kind of attitude might paralyze the Iranian opposition, as Kurds are a significant portion of it.

Popular Wizz Air flight’s travel time significantly increased

Wizz Air passengers All You Can Fly

Wizz Air carried passengers from the United Arab Emirates to Budapest with an hours-long detour – here is why.

According to Utazómajom, a Hungarian travel news media outlet, Wizz Air’s flight from Abu Dhabi, Dubai stops in Larnaca (Cyprus) to change crew and refill the jet fuel tanks. We could think about the war in the Middle East as a reason.

However, flights from Budapest to those destinations do not land in Cyprus but continue their journey in Iraqi airspace.

Passengers complain about the lack of information

Interestingly, the Hungarian low-cost airline does not inform its passengers about the longer travel time on its website. The detour costs +3-4 hours, which is significant considering the 2-hour-long travel time.

According to the passengers, Wizz provides no information about the detour and the long travel time, reaching almost eight hours in some cases. Meanwhile, the Hungarian low-cost airline states they inform their passengers about the modification, so it is difficult to know what is true.

Wizz Air engine
Photo: FB/Wizz Air

Here is the official answer from Wizz Air

Based on the sources of Utazómajom, the passengers of Wizz Air’s Monday flight were told that the stop in Larnaca was a must due to the strong headwind. Without a refill on the island of Aphrodite, they would not have had enough jet fuel to reach Budapest.

Utazómajom asked about Wizz Air’s standpoint on the issue. The Hungarian budget airline said the route modification was due to the violent conflict in the Middle East. However, the measure is not permanent and does not affect all the flights.

Wizz Air passengers Budapest Airport jet fuel
Photo: FB/Wizz Air

Since the work time of their crew is strictly regulated, in some cases, their pilots must land in Cyprus to change the cabin crew. The airline added they regularly inform their passengers about the longer travel time and the extra stop. Passenger, crew and aircraft safety is of paramount importance for Wizz.

Here is a cockpit video of a Wizz Air Airbus A321Neo landing in Sarajevo:

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Ruling Fidesz is afraid of a migration wave towards Europe

Hungary migration southern border fidesz

Kinga Gál, the head of ruling Fidesz’s European Parliament Group, has called for preventing an aggravation of the conflict between Iran and Israel, warning that it could set off a major migration wave towards Europe.

Speaking to Hungarian reporters on Wednesday after an EP debate on Iran’s attack on Israel earlier this month, Gál said the April 14 attack carried the risk that the entirety of the Middle East could turn into a war zone, which would pose a threat to Europe’s and the entire world’s peace and security.

“The conflict must be prevented from becoming an inter-state war and from setting the entire region alight,” the Fidesz member said. “This calls for both sides to exercise restraint.”

The MEP warned that an aggravation of the conflict would have severe consequences, such as triggering a major migration wave towards Europe.

“We need to prevent the emergence of another major migration wave which would threaten Hungary and the whole of Europe,” she said.

Hungary’s interests lie in there being peace in the Middle East, Gál said, adding that the Hungarian government was sticking to its pro-peace stance despite the EP’s plan to “punish Hungary by adopting a position accusing it of spreading Russian propaganda”. Hungary, she said, would stick to its pro-peace stance concerning the Russia-Ukraine war in spite of any resolution condemning the country. She called for a ceasefire and the start of peace talks in the conflict.

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BREAKING: Another flight cancelled at Budapest Airport, here is Wizz Air’s announcement about Israel flights

Budapest Airport cancelled flight airspace fee

Restrictions at Dubai International Airport, the world’s second busiest hub, are impacting flights from Budapest Airport. Meanwhile, airlines have suspended flights to the Middle Eastern country following an Iranian drone attack against Israel. Here’s Wizz Air’s surprising announcement regarding the issue.

Flight from Budapest Airport cancelled

According to turizmus.com, a Hungarian travel news outlet, the Flydubai airline has cancelled its flight from Budapest Airport to Dubai due to extreme weather conditions. Specifically, today’s FZ1405 / FZ1406 DXB-BUD-DXB flight is affected. Passengers will receive refunds for their tickets and have the option to rebook.

 

Travellers at the airport are advised to contact the crew for updates on the situation. Dubai International Airport, the world’s second busiest, was closed yesterday due to an unprecedented amount of rainfall. Reports suggest that the total annual precipitation for Dubai fell within a single day, leading to chaotic scenes where planes appeared to navigate runways like boats. Here is a video:

Airlines cancel Israel flights one after the other

Recently, EasyJet decided to cancel all flights to Tel Aviv for the next six months due to missile and drone attacks launched by Iran last Saturday. The first EasyJet flight to Israel is scheduled for 27 October. Passengers have the option to receive refunds or rebook their tickets.

Multiple airlines suspended services to Israel and other Middle Eastern destinations on Saturday but reopened routes by Tuesday. Some airlines have rerouted flights to avoid Iranian and Israeli airspace. Virgin Atlantic announced its decision not to fly over Iraq, Iran or Israel. The Lufthansa group and Delta have suspended flights to Beirut, while British Airways continues its operations in Israel, as reported by turizmus.com.

Budapest Airport Schengen
Photo: Budapest Airport/FB

Surprising decision of Wizz Air

Wizz Air, the Hungarian budget airline, has made a surprising decision regarding the situation. Having resumed service to Tel Aviv from Budapest in March, Wizz Air faced questions about its stance amidst evolving security concerns. The Guardian reported potential changes, prompting inquiries to the company by index.hu. Wizz Air confirmed the cancellation of its 14 and 15 April flights but resumed operations on 16 April following careful consideration of all available information.

Wizz Air has decided to continue operating flights according to the regular schedule, with no further cancellations planned. Such a decision is only conceivable if there is a significant change in the security situation in Israel.

Budapest Airport Wizz Air travel bus
Photo: FB

Unprecedented Iranian attack against Israel

Iran launched an unprecedented attack on Israel with hundreds of missiles and drones on 13 April. Israeli defence forces claim to have destroyed 99% of the attacking devices. The attack has drawn condemnation from most world leaders.

Hungary’s foreign minister, Péter Szijjártó, reiterated his government’s support for Israel in response to the attack.

Terror threat level heightened in Hungary?

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán convened the Defence Council on Sunday, leading to speculation about a potential increase in Hungary’s terrorism threat level. Magyar Nemzet, a government-close news outlet, reported on the purported elevation. Later, the counter-terrorism force TEK clarified that the government did not raise the terror threat level in Hungary. “Hungary’s terror threat level has remained at 3 since 2016, unaffected by the Defence Council meeting on Sunday,” TEK declared.

terrorism isis hungary dominik
TEK in action. Illustration. Photo: TEK/police.hu

Nonetheless, TEK admitted that the police tightened security measures at diplomatic missions, public administration institutions and border checkpoints, while reassuring the public of no imminent terrorist threat to Hungary’s safety.

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  • Istanbul is now available from two Hungarian cities with direct Wizz Air flights

 

Government increased the threat of terrorism in Hungary? – here is the official answer

Counter terrorism Center Hungary TEK

Hungarian authorities have no information about preparing any terrorist act that could pose a direct threat to the safety of the Hungarian people, counter-terrorism force TEK said on Tuesday, noting that a medium-level (level-3) alert was in place in the country.

TEK said in a statement that police have tightened the protection of diplomatic missions, the surveillance of public administration institutions, and inspections at border crossing points.

TEK continuously communicates with law enforcement and other partner institutions and evaluates information.

It said TEK provides for the safety of the Hungarian people with all possible means and is prepared to take necessary measures without delay if need be.

The terror level 3 has been in force in Hungary since 2016, and this has not changed following the Defence Council meeting on Sunday.

The increase or decrease of the level is ordered by the Minister of Interior, either on his own authority or on the initiative of the Counter-Terrorism Coordination Committee, with the agreement of the Defence Council.

After the Iranian action against Israel, the neighbouring countries did not change their terror classifications, so the medium level, which had been established much earlier, remained.

As we wrote before, according to Magyar Nemzet, the terror alert level in Hungary has been heightened following Sunday’s Defence Council meeting, details HERE.

BREAKING NEWS – Terror alert heightened in Hungary, says pro-government site – UPDATE

terror alert hungary

According to Magyar Nemzet, the terror alert level in Hungary has been heightened following Sunday’s Defence Council meeting. However, the government has yet to issue an official statement.

As previously mentioned, Viktor Orbán convened the Defence Council on Sunday in response to Iran’s attack on Israel. Following the meeting, he expressed a commitment to safeguarding Hungarian families from the repercussions of global conflicts. More details are available here.

According to a  Magyar Nemzet article, the Prime Minister’s announcement prompted an escalation in the terror alert level, as per his request.

Elevated terror alert: what does this entail?

It means enhanced intelligence sharing, heightened security measures for high-profile facilities and dignitaries and increased police presence in public spaces, mass gatherings and Jewish-affiliated institutions.

It is probable that security measures for key figures in the country, such as the Prime Minister, the President of the Republic, the Speaker of the House, members of the Government or heads of the judiciary, have already been bolstered. Citizens can expect to encounter more armed patrols in major urban areas, and the Hungarian Defence Forces may also be deployed.

Magyar Nemzet reports that the heightened security measures will remain in place until the situation improves or could be escalated further if the threat persists.

Terror alert classification in Hungary

Hungary defines the terrorist threat level on a four-point scale in accordance with relevant legislation (Government Decision No.1824/2015 (19.XI.) on the uniform implementation order of counter-terrorism tasks), wherein 1 represents the highest level and 4 the lowest.

The Minister of the Interior, with the Counter-Terrorism Coordination Committee’s recommendation or independently, holds the authority to issue, modify or abolish these classifications with the Defence Council’s approval.

UPDATE

Government increased the threat of terrorism in Hungary? – here is the official answer

PM Orbán about Middle East conflict: What we feared has happened

iran hungary orbán

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, in a Facebook post about the Middle East conflict on Sunday, vowed that his government “will do everything to ensure that the wars going on in the world don’t threaten the peace and safety of Hungarian families.”

In a video message after a meeting of the Defence Council, the prime minister condemned Iran’s drone and missile attack on Israel.

The attack, he said, threatened an interstate war in the Middle East, which posed a grave danger to the entire world, including Hungary.

Orbán said he had called a meeting of the Defence Council on Sunday to assess the conflict’s national security and economic effects on Hungary.

“I have instructed the interior minister and senior counter-terrorism officers to guarantee the safety of the Hungarian people using every means at their disposal,” he said.

“On Tuesday, I will travel to Brussels to assess the current war situation with European leaders,” Orbán said. “We must do everything to ensure that the wars going on in the world don’t threaten the peace and safety of Hungarian families.”

The video message in Hungarian: 

The Israeli airstrike on the Iranian embassy in Damascus on Monday, which was a response to the current Iranian attack and left several people dead, was not commented on or condemned by the Hungarian government.

After Iran attacked Israel, many local Hungarians contacted the embassy, details HERE.

As we wrote in February, Hungary and Iran both are interested in developing economic cooperation in sectors not subject to sanctions, such as the pharmaceutical industry, the health and food industries and water management, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said in Tehran, details HERE.

BREAKING: Budapest Airport cancelled flight to Israel!

According to the most recent data, the Persian state launched an attack on Israel, with over 300 drones and rockets in retaliation for the April Israeli airstrike targeting their Damascus embassy. Due to the escalating conflict, multiple airlines halted their flights to the Middle Eastern country, including Budapest Airport.

As reported by Budflyer, a Hungarian air traffic news Facebook page, Israir’s scheduled flight to Tel-Aviv, Israel, should have departed from Budapest at 10 p.m. yesterday. However, the departure was initially delayed and subsequently cancelled later that night, as announced by Budapest Airport.

Israeli media sources revealed that authorities evacuated Ben Gurion Airport in Tel-Aviv due to the Iranian air strikes, prompting several airlines, including KLM, Lufthansa, Austrian Airlines, Air France and Qantas, to cancel their flights to Middle Eastern destinations.

Air France Budapest Airport
Photo: facebook.com/airfrance

Furthermore, Israel, Lebanon, Egypt and Iraq temporarily closed their airspace in response to the escalating conflict.

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán convened Hungary’s defence council meeting to address the situation. He emphasised that the escalation poses a significant threat to both the world’s and Hungary’s security. Meanwhile, Iran’s UN mission clarified that they view the retaliatory strike as a response to the April 1 airstrike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus, Syria, and consider the matter concluded.

Read also:

  • Fatal air accident in Hungary: small plane crashes, passengers died – Read more HERE
  • Powerful modern Israeli defence radar erected in Hungary – PHOTOS and more in THIS article

Featured image: depositphotos.com

MiniDubai: Hungary signs cooperation pact with UAE, EUR 5 billion project on horizon

szijjártó

Hungary and the United Arab Emirates signed an economic cooperation agreement establishing the conditions for a EUR 5 billion rehabilitation project in Budapest on Wednesday.

The agreement was signed by Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó and the UAE’s Minister of State for Foreign Trade Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

At a joint press conference after the meeting, Szijjarto said the “flagship” project by UAE developer Eagle Hills would give new impetus to the two countries’ economic cooperation, as well as Budapest’s development. Under the project “the abandoned industrial area around the RákosrendezÅ‘ train station and rail yard in the city’s north will be transformed into a new city quarter with tourism, economic, business and sport functions”, the foreign minister said.

He said enhanced cooperation between Hungary and the UAE could pave the way for investments in other branches of the economy too.

Szijjarto noted that bilateral trade between Hungary and the UAE had climbed over an annual USD 1 billion and pointed to the presence of Hungarian companies in the Emirates’ food industry and ICT sector.

Al Zeyoudi called the agreement a “milestone” for economic relations with Hungary and said there was potential for further cooperation in the food industry and energy sector, including nuclear and renewables.

Read also:

Superb news: Hungarian Wizz Air saves passengers after Ryanair’s announced departure!

Wizz Air passengers All You Can Fly

The Hungarian budget airline Wizz Air said it would offer a discounted rebooking option for the Ryanair passengers stuck in Jordan. The special, so-called rescue tickets will cost HUF 12,390 (EUR 30), and you may travel to Budapest, Rome or Milan with them.

Ryanair announced before that they would not fly between Amman and Budapest because the war was too close. The Irish low-cost airline has been trying to keep the route up but has only been managing to fill the planes flying to Jordan with great difficulty and cheap tickets. We detailed the causes of their decision in THIS article.

Therefore, the Irish low-cost’s main rival, the Hungarian Wizz Air, decided to enter the market and help people stuck in Jordan to get out. The Hungarian low-cost carrier offers direct flights between Amman and Budapest, Milan or Vienna. The decision shows the airline’s commitment towards the European and Middle Eastern passengers, their statement cleared.

According to Wizz Air, the passengers have time until 30 April to buy their tickets for their Amman rescue planes. The budget airline created a subsidiary website for that – click HERE to reach it.

Wizz Air and Ryanair CEOs are not friends

Based on index.hu, passengers may do their rebooking with the six-digit code they got from Ryanair. Wizz’s first flight landed in Jordan in 2013, and they would like to strengthen their presence with this decision. They would like to offer service to those locals whose holiday was ruined by Ryanair’s decision. Wizz Air is offering seven routes from the Middle Eastern state.

József Váradi Wizz Air CEO Hungary
Wizz CEO József Váradi. Photo: FB/Budflyer

We wrote in THIS article that Wizz Air CEO József Váradi said in an interview that his Ryanair counterpart, Michael O’Leary probably was “under the influence of drugs” when he said Ryanair was Hungary’s nr1 airline. Mr Váradi said Ryanair’s market share is only 26%, while Wizz Air’s is 38%. He also said that Wizz Air is Hungary’s flag carrier.

The incident shows that the two airlines are competing hard for the passengers in the European market, and Wizz Air’s Jordan move may mean they will have better positions in a post-war Jordan than Ryanair.

Read also:

  • Wizz Air surprises passengers with amazing spring price reduction – Read more HERE
  • Hungarian Wizz Air launches six new flights from Budapest! – Details in THIS article

Featured image: illustration, depositphotos.com

Breaking: Ryanair closes a popular Budapest route

amman jordan ryanair

The war is too close, which is why Ryanair is closing its Budapest–Amman route. The Irish low-cost airline has been trying to keep the route up but has only been managing to fill the planes flying to Jordan with great difficulty and cheap tickets.

Ryanair closes Amman route

Ryanair is closing its Budapest–Ammam flight at the end of the winter timetable, i.e. at the end of March, Okosutas reports. Since the war started, the willingness to travel to Jordas has dropped significantly.

Of the countries in the region, Jordan was not the only one to suffer from the prolonged conflict: Hungarian low-cost airline Wizz Air had to suspend its flight to Sharm El Sheikh in Egypt for the summer.

At the end of last summer, Ryanair was delighted to announce plans in Jordan for a more extensive network than ever before. However, the drop in demand caused by the war has forced them to reverse this, Okosutas writes.

Wizz Air still flies to Jordan

Ryanair is not only closing the route from Budapest but from everywhere in the region from Vienna to Bucharest.

In contrast, Wizz Air is still flying the Budapest–Ammam route. However, due to the lack of aircraft, the airline has introduced the not-so-comfortable night schedule on the route. According to Okosutas, there is still a pile of 15-euro tickets left.

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Hungary stands up for peace at the UN General Assembly, but not for Palestine

Szijjártó United Nations

Hungary continues to stand for peace, dialogue, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister said in New York on Monday, adding that the country opposed all forms of terrorism.

Hungary has borne the consequences of the war in Ukraine for more than two years and protected the external borders of the European Union against illegal migration, bound “in a vicious circle” with terrorism, Szijjártó told the UN General Assembly, according to a ministry statement.

Given these immediate security challenges, Hungary “is committed to peace, diplomacy, continuous global dialogue, and is against all forms of terrorism,” he said.

He expressed Hungary’s mounting concern over the conflict in the Middle East, saying the longer the conflict lasted, the greater the risk of its spreading. The minister added that Hamas “must be defeated”.

Szijjártó emphasised the importance of preventing the formation of a Lebanese front in the conflict, adding that the Beirut government, which wanted nothing to do with it, deserved maximum support from the international community.

He also said the delivery of humanitarian aid should be guaranteed to ensure that innocent people do not suffer the consequences of the brutal crimes of terrorists, calling on states and international organisations to do whatever possible to achieve this.

The minister praised Egypt in this regard. He also noted that Hungary provided more than 9 million US dollars to support its health system.

On the subject of the hostage situation, he urged the immediate, unconditional release of hostages, and expressed gratitude to Qatar for mediating in the release of three Hungarian hostages. He asked Qatar to carry on its efforts to ensure the quickest possible release of the other hostages, details HERE.

A sensible agreement was needed between the opposing parties before the start of Ramadan, he added.

Meanwhile, he said Hungary was “a strategic partner of Israel” while also keeping strong ties with Arab countries in the region. “As a responsible country, Hungary is ready to play its part in finding an appropriate solution to security crises worldwide,” he added.

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

foreign minister hungary ukraine

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

War in Middle East

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

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

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

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

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