Hungarian FM discusses EU integration, war with Bosnian counterpart

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The European Union has a historic obligation to boost the integration of the Western Balkans, and abandoning that plan would seriously harm Hungary’s security interests, Péter Szijjártó, the minister of foreign affairs and trade, said on Wednesday, after talks with his Bosnia and Herzegovinan counterpart, Bisera Turković.

Press conference with Turković

Szijjártó told a joint press conference with Turković that Hungary wanted to avoid at all cost “having to face security challenges similar to those in Ukraine from the southern border”, the ministry said in a statement. He welcomed the EU decision to grant candidate membership to Ukraine and Moldova, and called it a “grave mistake” and “double standards” that Georgia and Bosnia and Herzegovina failed to obtain that status.

“EU membership is one of the few causes over which there is a general consensus in Bosnia and Herzegovina,” he said. The candidacy could have strengthened cross-party cooperation and national stability in that country, he said.

Letters to the EC

Austria, Czechia, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia have sent a letter to the European Council, asking for the issue to be tabled in October, and for a decision to be made by December, he said. Szijjártó said the Hungarian government saw respectful dialogue with Western Balkan leaders as a priority, rather than engaging in “threats and sanctions”, which he said was “not a path to be followed”.

Regarding concrete steps taken by Hungary to aid Bosnia and Herzegovina’s EU integration, Szijjártó noted the “integration expert” Hungary had delegated to the Bosnian foreign ministry, the Hungarian embassy’s liaison work with NATO in Sarajevo and the fact that Hungary’s 164-strong contingent is one of the largest in the EU’s peacekeeping mission in the country.

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