Hungarian diplomacy has achieved its goals

18 March 2016

At a press conference in Brussels on Friday afternoon, in which he evaluated the agreement between the European Union and Turkey, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said that Hungarian diplomacy has achieved its goals.

“We have avoided the greatest danger”, the Prime Minister said, above all with reference to the fact that the agreement states that refugees can only be taken in on a voluntary basis. He added that every provision in the agreement which is concerned with the system for relocating refugees specifically and emphatically states that participation in the scheme is voluntary. With this, Hungry has achieved its goals, the Prime Minister confirmed.

He stated that the greatest achievement of the past six months has been the policy decision –made before the agreement reached with Turkey – to reinstate national border controls on the Western Balkans migration route.

Mr. Orbán added that Friday’s EU-Turkish agreement was necessary because, by enforcing controls on the Western Balkans route, the flow of migrants has been successfully stopped  at the Greek-Macedonian and Greek-Bulgarian borders, and as a result the situation in Greece has further deteriorated. The Prime Minister said that this tendency must be halted at all costs, and if there is no unity within the EU we may even lose Greece as a stable EU Member State.

Mr. Orbán reiterated that from the very beginning Hungary, together with the Visegrád countries, has been strongly opposed to the compulsory resettlement of refugees. At present, however, the key country is Macedonia, which must be given all the help it needs to maintain its border protection capability.

The Prime Minister also referred to the Hungarian diplomatic goal that Ukraine should be granted visa exemption before Turkey, and this was agreed in Brussels on a preliminary basis. He said that progress has been made on the issue of visa-free travel for Ukrainians, which for Hungary is a question of friendship, politics and morality. Hungary takes the view that the Ukrainian people need help, and authorising visa-free travel to the EU is the greatest help they can get.

He further stressed that, as part of the agreement and the funding to be provided for Turkey, Hungary will not assume any financial liability that would impose unbearable burdens on the country. Mr. Orbán said that according to the agreement, over and above the three billion euros already offered by the EU towards providing for Syrian refugees in the territory of Turkey, the leaders of the Member States have agreed that any additional EU funding may only be provided after the currently approved sum has been used.

Cabinet Office of the Prime Minister; Photo: MTI

« vissza

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Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has said that from Hungary’s viewpoint the two-day summit of EU heads of state and government in Brussels has so far been successful, “but at least encouraging”, though the “decisive battle” will have to be fought in May.
  • Viktor Orbán, 52
  • Lawyer, graduated at Eötvös Loránd University and studied at Pembroke College, Oxford
  • Married to Anikó Lévai
  • They have five children: Ráhel, Gáspár, Sára, Róza, Flóra
  • Chairman of FIDESZ, vice-chairman of the European People's Party

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