Viktor Orbán rebukes Volodymyr Zelensky as Hungarian election looms

Orbán intensifies anti-Ukrainian rhetoric amid election pressure

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.  Picture: POOL via REUTERS/LEON NEAL
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban

Hungary’s Viktor Orbán has criticised Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, describing him as “a man in a desperate position” whose “war efforts” he would not support, intensifying his anti-Ukrainian campaign before pivotal April elections.

As Hungary’s economy stagnates and Orbán’s Fidesz party trails the opposition Tisza party in most polls, the prime minister has framed the parliamentary election due on April 12 as a choice between war and peace, portraying Ukraine as undeserving of financial support.

In a Facebook post directly addressed to Zelensky, late on Thursday, Orbán said: “You are a man in a desperate position who, for the fourth year now, has been unable or unwilling to bring a war to an end — despite that the president of the US has provided every possible assistance to do so.

“Therefore, no matter how much you flatter me, we cannot support your war efforts,” the nationalist leader added, again rejecting financial aid for Ukraine.

On Thursday, Zelensky criticised Europe for being a “fragmented kaleidoscope of small and middle powers” lacking the courage to act decisively and facing a dark future unless it stood up to US and Russian power.

Orbán, who has maintained close ties with Moscow and with Russian President Vladimir Putin, has sought to associate Hungarian opposition leader Peter Magyar with Brussels and Ukraine and accused Ukraine of wanting a change in government.

“The Ukrainians will be active participants in the Hungarian campaign, because they have a vested interest in a change of government in Hungary,” Orbán told a briefing early on Friday in Brussels.

Ukraine’s government could not immediately be reached for comment.

Orbán said his government would launch a “national petition” that Hungarians can sign to “tell Brussels that Hungarians won’t pay to Ukraine”.

This primarily targets rural voters and echoes Orbán’s past anti-migrant campaigns.

Magyar has said Tisza supports peace in Ukraine, rejects the idea of conscription, and will not support any escalation in the war.

Reuters


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