Latest News

Hungary summons Ukrainian envoy for what PM Orban claims is election meddling

Viktor Orban, Prime Minister of Hungary, said on Monday that Hungary will summon the ambassador of Ukraine over what Orban called attempts to interfere with a Hungarian Parliamentary election scheduled for April 12.

Orban's anti-Ukraine campaigns has intensified in recent weeks. He has tried to link opposition leader Peter Magyar from Hungary with Kyiv, the EU executive in Brussels and his campaign.

In most polls, Orban's Fidesz Party trails the opposition party?Tisza as Hungary's economic stagnation continues.

Orban, in a campaign that primarily targets rural voters, has "portrayed Ukraine as being unworthy of financial assistance, framing April's vote as a decision between war and peace, echoing past anti-migrant efforts.

Orban has repeatedly refused European Union aid to Ukraine and launched a national petition asking voters to sign to show they don't want to pay for the conflict.

Orban stated in a video that "Last Week, Ukrainian leaders including the president made insulting and threatening remarks against Hungary... Our national security service has... concluded that this is a coordinated attempt to interfere with Hungarian election."

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry did not respond immediately to a comment request.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the president of Ukraine last Thursday, criticized Europe as a "fragmented" kaleidoscope?of small and middle powers that lacks the courage to take decisive action. He said that Europe shouldn't allow its capitals become "little Moscow".

Zelenskiy stated in a Davos speech that "every 'Viktor,' who lives on European money and tries to sell out European interest deserves a smack across the head." (Reporting and editing by Kevin Liffey; Krisztina than)

(source: Reuters)