Hungary foreign policy has achieved its goals, says Minister Szijjártó

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The past year has shown that Hungary’s foreign policy has achieved its goals and the means to achieve them have been effective, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Tuesday.

At his annual hearing in front of parliament’s foreign affairs committee, Szijjártó said migration was still the number one issue on Europe’s political agenda. Countries that go against the mainstream and reserve the right to decide for themselves whom they allow into their territory and whom they wish to live together with still face constant pressure, he said. The idea of a mandatory migrant settlement is not completely off the table and still gets floated regularly, he added.

Szijjártó said

Hungary’s ability to protect itself and resist pressure was “an important success”.

He said significant forces were in play in New York in an attempt to enshrine the United Nations’ global migration compact into international law. Hungary is one of the countries that rejected the compact, Szijjártó said, adding, at the same time, that serious attempts were being made to make the document a point of reference in international law.

Szijjártó said the migration situation was intensifying at Europe’s southern borders “and our interest” is that instead of inspiring new migration waves, the EU should help migrants return home or potential migrants stay in their homeland.

Hungary is a “medium-sized” central European country surrounded by major powers, the minister said, adding that the aim was for none of them to have interests “opposed to our success”.

This has been achieved, he said. Hungary has started to rebuild its political ties with the United States, it has been visited by the German chancellor as well as the Russian and Turkish presidents and the prime minister has regular consultations with the French president, Szijjártó noted.

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Read alsoHungary foreign policy has achieved its goals, says Minister Szijjártó

Meanwhile, he said the Visegrad Group comprising Hungary, the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia was still “the most successful and tightest alliance within the EU”, adding that the V4 had been successful in representing their joint stance on various EU-related issues. Economic ties among the four countries have also got stronger and they are committed to upholding the alliance, he said.

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