Viktor Orbán: Europe needs to ‘go back to the drawing board’

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Europe “needs to go back to the drawing board” because it has failed to achieve its goals, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said at a panel discussion with his Visegrád Group counterparts in Budapest on Friday.
“We are pro-European politicians,” Orbán said referring to himself and his Czech, Polish and Slovak counterparts.
The V4 aims to make Europe stronger, Orbán said, adding that a new plan for Europe would have to include a clause on the creation of a labour-based society.
Europe must return to the top in terms of technological development and the continent needs its own army, the prime minister said.
Instead of aiming to become a “united states of Europe”, the block should be an alliance of free nations, he added.
Orbán insisted that all of this was possible and the only question was whether Europe would have a strong enough leadership to accomplish these goals.
On the subject of migration, Orbán said that the problem would grow beyond Europe; “it is clear that the debate is shifting from the European arena to a global stage, another issue Europe will have to address.” Orbán quoted former United Nations chief Kofi Annan as saying that “migration is a solution rather than a problem” and insisted that Antonio Guterres, the incumbent secretary-general had recently said that “migration is good”.
“We will help all who need to be helped but we will not accommodate migrants; we do not wish to become a destination country for migrants,” Orbán said.
“There are dangerous things in the works at the UN,” Orbán insisted. He said the UN’s migration agenda would call for easing punishments for illegal border crossing, assigning special roles for NGOs in handling migration and call on all countries to take in migrants.
Orbán said the V4’s opposition to immigration was about the protection of Christian culture. This is not a question of religion, he insisted, arguing that Christian culture also included non-believers. It includes a Christian way of life, the freedom of religion, the family model, the relationship between man and woman. “We live in integration here and we do not want to import anti-Semitism,” Orbán said. “We insist on our tolerant, Christian way of life and we cannot lose the feeling of being at home.”






