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Hungary’s Prime Minister Orban casts doubt on European Union accession talks for Ukraine

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban
Prime Minister Viktor Orban delivers an address on the opening day of the Hungarian parliament’s autumn session in Budapest on Monday.
(Zoltan Mathe / MTI)
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Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban cast doubt on the prospect of the European Union beginning negotiations any time soon for Ukraine to join the bloc, saying it was unrealistic to launch the accession process with a country that’s at war.

Speaking to state radio Friday, Orban noted that unanimity among the EU’s 27 member states is required to admit a new country to the club. In the case of Hungary, he said, the parliament would have to give the go-ahead to Ukraine, which has ambitions to join the EU within two years.

“When I’m in the chamber, I don’t feel the insurmountable desire for the Hungarian parliament to vote for Ukraine’s membership [in] the European Union within two years. So I would be careful with these ambitious plans,” Orban said.

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Ukraine was officially granted EU candidate status last year. The decision, prompted by the war, was unusually rapid for the EU, which ordinarily takes a go-slow approach to expansion. The European Council is expected to begin negotiations on Ukraine’s accession in December.

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Hungary, which has been sanctioned by the EU for alleged rule-of-law violations and corruption, has sparred with Kyiv over the rights of an ethnic Hungarian minority in western Ukraine. While it has admitted Ukrainian refugees and condemned Russia’s invasion, it has — uniquely among EU countries — maintained close relations with Moscow and argued against supplying Ukraine with arms or providing it with economic assistance.

On Friday, Orban said the EU “will have to answer very long and difficult questions until we get to the point where we can even decide whether to start negotiations.”

“When we are discussing the future of Ukraine in Brussels in the autumn, we will not be able to avoid the question of whether we can think seriously about the membership of such a country,” he said. “Can we start negotiations with a country that is in a territorial war? We do not know the size of this country’s territory since it is still at war, and we do not know what its population is, because they are fleeing. ... To admit a country without knowing its parameters would be unprecedented.”

On Monday, Orban told the Hungarian parliament that his government would “not support Ukraine on any international issue” until the language rights of the Hungarian minority in western Ukraine are restored.

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