Poland’s Finance Minister Andrzej Domański has called on the European Union to make a €90 billion loan available to Ukraine “as soon as possible” after Hungarian voters ousted nationalist Viktor Orbán, whose Russia-friendly government had blocked the funds.
Orbán, who had long been at loggerheads with Brussels and Kyiv, lost power in Sunday’s parliamentary election after 16 years as prime minister, as the opposition Tisza party led by Péter Magyar swept to a landslide victory.
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Magyar, who is now poised to become Hungary’s next prime minister, has pledged to bring the country back into the European mainstream and undo Orbán-era policies that had strained relations with the EU.
In an interview with CNN on April 14, Domański praised the election’s outcome. “Hungarian people have chosen Europe,” he said, adding that it would be easier to cooperate with the new government in Budapest.
‘We can’t allow Putin to win’
He also said a €90 billion EU loan to Kyiv, which had been blocked by Orbán, must be made available to Ukraine “as soon as possible.”
“We need to support Ukraine. We just cannot allow [Russian President Vladimir] Putin to win this war,” Domański said.
Orbán had blocked the loan amid a dispute with Kyiv over the suspension of Russian oil supplies via the Soviet-era Druzhba pipeline, which Ukraine says was severely damaged by a Russian strike in late January and requires time to repair.
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