Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has congratulated Poland on its performance during the V4 presidency in what he called the most difficult year of recent decades.
According to MTI, PM Orbán said that cooperation continued among the four members despite the difficulties faced in the past year and none of them were left alone in trouble. The Visegrad Group members cooperated in transporting citizens home when Covid restrictions made travel difficult, distributing equipment, sending doctors to each other and also in access to vaccines, he said.
PM Orbán said that after the coronavirus pandemic, the global economic and world politics status quo has changed. The world’s largest free trade area has been established in Asia and the United Kingdom quit the European Union, he said. The prime minister said that good relations with Britain should be maintained even after Brexit. PM Orbán said that if the V4 countries were considered a single entity today, they would represent the world’s 17th largest economy, with economic growth twice as fast as the EU’s and public debt representing only 4 percent of that in the EU. After Germany, the V4 countries include the highest number of workers in the EU, he said.
In response to a question, PM Orbán said that overcoming the area’s lag in infrastructure development was a priority. During the Cold War, connections were established in east-west direction and the situation has not changed since, he said. However, building north-south links have now become vitally important for the V4 countries. It remains to be seen, however, how much EU funding can be involved in this programme, he said. PM Orbán said central Europe represented considerable economic weight in the EU economy. The central European nations are full members of the European Union with major contributions to its overall performance that help the bloc keep pace with other regions. Accordingly, they demand due respect, he said.
The prime minister said Hungarians will never accept other EU members telling them how to raise their children. Nor will they accept anyone saying that a central European nation should be brought to its knees, he said.