
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said the move was in retaliation for the Commission’s RePowerEU plan, which aims to completely cut Russian energy imports.
(Source : Euronews)
Hungary and Slovakia announced they would block the EU’s 18th sanctions package against Russia during the Foreign Affairs Council in Brussels, Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Monday, adding that the move came in response to the European Commission’s RePowerEU plan that aims to cease all energy imports from Russia.
“They demanded today that we create a sanctions package that is as strong, as comprehensive, and as severely punishing the energy sector as possible. However, we, together with Slovakia, prevented the adoption of the sanctions package today. We did this because, in parallel with all this, the EU wants to prohibit the member states, Hungary and Slovakia, from buying cheap Russian natural gas and cheap Russian crude oil, as we have been doing so far,” Szijjártó said.
The adoption of the sanctions package was not on the official agenda of EU foreign ministers at the meeting, though interventions and political statements were made on the issue. A substantive vote on the sanctions package will come in a meeting of ambassadors in Brussels. At the closing press conference of the meeting, EU High Representative Kaja Kallas said they are aiming to adopt the new package of sanctions by the end of this week.
The EU’s fresh proposal for sanctions proposals was released at the beginning of June, would blacklist an additional 22 Russian banks and extend the ban on transactions to entities based outside the country that contribute to the circumvention of sanctions. They would ban financial transactions with the North Stream pipeline.
Hungary is also opposed to Ukraine’s EU accession
Péter Szijjártó also made clear during a press conference in Brussels that Hungary isn’t willing to support any statement in support of Ukraine’s EU accession at the European Council later this week.
“The Ukrainians cannot make a single step towards accession until the Hungarian cultural community’s rights are returned. No pressure from Brussels would force us to give up [this condition],” the minister said.
The Hungarian government has been critical of Ukraine because it sees Kyiv as limiting the language and educational rights of the Hungarian minorities in Ukraine’s Transcarpathia region. The government of Viktor Orbán also launched a campaign against Ukraine’s EU accession, portraying this as an imminent threat to the EU’s economy. At earlier EU summits 26 member states issued statements in support of Ukraine’s accession without Hungary.