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PM Orbán and Macron welcome development of bilateral relations

The prime minister noted that French companies are heavily involved in the upgrade of Hungary’s Paks nuclear power plant. PM Orbán said he and Macron had also agreed on expanding their defense industry cooperation.

During their meeting in Paris, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said he and French President Emmanuel Macron welcomed the development of bilateral relations and agreed to further strengthen them.

The prime minister said there are currently 45,000-50,000 Hungarian families making a living at French-owned companies in Hungary, and bilateral trade turnover has doubled in ten years, adding that one of France’s biggest companies was also involved in the Hungarian state’s reacquisition of Liszt Ferenc International Airport. PM Orbán said he had met representatives of that company on Tuesday, and today he and Macron had reaffirmed that this was not merely an investment but also a major development programme that was important to both France and Hungary. PM Orbán said they had also spoken about European affairs at their meeting. He noted that France is leading a European nuclear coalition of EU countries that say clean energy is impossible without nuclear energy. Hungary has been a part of the coalition since the beginning, he noted, adding that they had clarified the details of their cooperation in the matter. The prime minister noted that French companies are also heavily involved in the upgrade of Hungary’s Paks nuclear power plant. Orbán said he and Macron had also agreed on expanding their defense industry cooperation. France has already brought defense industry investments to Hungary, but the two countries are also exploring new opportunities for cooperation, he said.

The prime minister said the European Union’s leadership positions have been decided, but Hungary has always been in favour of involving everyone in European decisions. PM Orbán said it was “not good” if the most important positions for the next five years along with their corresponding programmes were divided up on a party basis “by those who appointed themselves for this”, warning that it was “never good” if there was a “governing party and an opposition, a majority and a minority” in the EU. Everyone should be included, he said, adding that this step had become “a coalition of the parties supporting the war and migration”, which Hungary had a duty to oppose. PM Orbán said his talks with French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris had also covered the war in Ukraine, noting that Hungary and France had “significant disagreements” in the matter. “I made it clear to the president that Hungary isn’t concerning itself with either Ukraine or Russia; it’s concerning itself with peace,” the prime minister said. He said Hungary was not against one country or another but against war. “It’s the war that we want to stop, so the most important goal for us is for there to be a ceasefire as soon as possible and to prevent further deaths,” he said. In response to a question, PM Orbán said Chinese-Hungarian relations were not a topic of discussion at the meeting. “Everyone knows that Hungary has had balanced and good relations with China since historical times, and China has also elevated its cooperation with Hungary to a very high level,” he said. He said the EU was aware of China’s role in the modernisation of Hungary’s economy, and China has offered Hungary a role in the modernisation of its economy. “This entails an ever-increasing economic cooperation, to which the Europeans have no objections, nor can they,” he said.