News Flash
UZHHOROD, Ukraine, Jan 29, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Hungary's Foreign Minister Peter
Szijjarto will meet his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba in western
Ukraine on Monday, ahead of an EU summit aimed at unlocking aid for the war-
torn country.
Relations between the two neighbours have been strained over the past few
years and were further aggravated when Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban
in December vetoed 50 billion euros ($55 billion) in EU aid for Kyiv.
In an effort to mend ties and "find solutions" to their differences,
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky suggested a direct meeting with Orban,
and Monday's talks between Szijjarto and Kuleba in the city of Uzhhorod are
intended to lay the groundwork.
Szijjarto has not visited Ukraine since Russia launched its offensive against
Kyiv, although he has been to Moscow on several occasions.
Security measures were stepped up in Uzhhorod -- home to a large ethnic
Hungarian community -- after a death threat against Szijjarto surfaced.
Zelensky's chief of staff Andriy Yermak will also attend the meeting.
Orban is the only EU leader who has maintained close ties with the Kremlin
following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Earlier this month, Orban expressed willingness to support Ukraine, provided
the support is kept separate from the European Union's budget and reviewed
annually.
The talks come just days before European Union leaders are due to convene for
an extraordinary summit on Thursday to make progress on their stalled aid
package for Kyiv.
In December, Orban abstained from a decision to open talks with Ukraine on
joining the bloc by leaving the room when the vote was taken.
He has also called for ceasefire negotiations with Moscow, claiming that
Ukraine cannot win the war.
Minority rights are another point of contention between the two countries.
More than 100,000 ethnic Hungarians live in Ukraine, almost all in the region
of Transcarpathia, which belonged to Hungary before World War I.
To appease relations, the Ukrainian parliament in December passed a law to
restore some language rights for national minorities.
But Budapest insists that the status of Hungarian must be restored to the
situation before Ukraine passed a controversial language education law in
2017.