Hungarian Szijjártó says he sees nothing wrong with working for his Russian counterpart Lavrov
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó has commented on the leak of audio recordings of his conversations with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and once again criticised the European Union's sanctions policy against Russia.
Ukrainska Pravda
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Péter Szijjártó. Stock photo: Getty Images
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó has commented on the leak of audio recordings of his conversations with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and once again criticised the European Union's sanctions policy against Russia.
Source:Szijjártó onFacebook, as reported by European Pravda
Details:On 31 March, audio recordings of conversations between Lavrov and Szijjártó were leaked to the media, shedding light on their communication amid the scandal over Budapest's alleged passing of details of closed EU discussions to Moscow.
Among the conversations was one concerning Szijjártó's lobbying for the lifting of EU sanctions against Gulbahor Ismailova, sister of Russian oligarch Alisher Usmanov.
Following this, Szijjártó immediately stated that he had known for some time that "foreign intelligence services – with the active cooperation of Hungarian journalists – are wiretapping" his phone calls.
"Today the 'intelligence officers' made another 'important discovery': they proved that I say the same thing in public as I do on the phone… Great work!" the Hungarian foreign minister wrote.
He noted that "the sanctions policy is a failure; it does more harm to the EU than to Russia".
"We have also made it unmistakably clear on countless occasions that we will never allow sanctions to be imposed against individuals or companies that are important for Hungary's energy security or for achieving peace, nor against those for whom there are simply no grounds or justification for being placed on the sanctions list. And we will continue to insist on this," Szijjártó stressed.
He also claims that he "regularly consults and has consulted with foreign ministers of many other non-EU countries on sanctions measures".
Background:
The Washington Post previously reported that Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártóregularly providedRussian Foreign Minister Lavrov with "live reports on what was being discussed" at EU meetings, as well as information on possible decisions.
Szijjártó subsequentlyconfirmed the calls had taken place, claiming that EU decisions on energy, the automotive industry, and security directly affect Hungary's relations with partners outside the European Union.
Reports have also emerged that theEU is excluding Hungaryfrom sensitive negotiations over concerns about leaks to Russia.