Poland’s Tusk and Ireland’s Martin blast Hungarian foreign minister’s ‘repulsive’, ‘sinister’ and ‘unacceptable’ backchannel talks with Russia

Separately, Ireland’s Martin and Poland’s Tusk very strongly criticised the latest disclosures on Hungarian foreign minister Péter Szijjártó’s relations with Russia, calling his conversations with his Moscow counterpart “repulsive” and “sinister.”

Irish prime minister Micheál Martin and Polish prime minister Donald Tusk attend a press conference after their meeting in Warsaw, Poland.
Irish prime minister Micheál Martin and Polish prime minister Donald Tusk attend a press conference after their meeting in Warsaw, Poland. Photograph: Paweł Supernak/EPA

Earlier today, a group of five European media outlets published what they said was a phone call between Szijjártó and the Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, discussing their plan to amend the EU’s sanctions list to Moscow’s liking (11:10).

The investigation also alleged further contacts between the minister and Russian officials.

Tusk and Martin said the tone of the recorded conversation showed “unacceptable” and “deferential tone” from the EU country’s minister, with the Irish PM saying it “confirmed what many suspected” about Hungary “doing the bidding for Russia” within the bloc.

In unusually strong comments, Tusk said:

“What we have heard, and what we had already suspected, is merely a confirmation of the deeply disturbing political dependence of Viktor Orbán’s government and his foreign minister, Mr Szijjártó, directly on the authorities in Moscow.

It has been a long time, if ever, since I have heard something so disheartening. What these recordings have revealed is more than just the political dependency of the Budapest government on Moscow; it has exposed just how unacceptable and bizarre this relationship truly is.

A foreign minister of a European nation – a member of the European Union – reporting to the Russian foreign minister on the completion of a task and asking for patience because he knows he still has several more tasks to carry out? One could hardly imagine anything more repulsive. It is absolutely disqualifying.

Poland loves Hungary, and Poles love the Hungarian people; ours is a friendship that has endured for decades and centuries. That is why it is so important to me that everyone in Hungary hears this: nothing has changed on our end. We are glad to be part of the European community alongside the Hungarian people.

The tragedy is that Viktor Orbán’s government – certainly Orbán himself and minister Szijjártó – effectively left the European Union a long time ago.

Martin joined in, adding:

I think it is a very sinister development.

It confirms what many suspected that the Hungarian government has been doing the bidding for Russia within the European Union for quite some time.

The deferential tone in the conversation was alarming, and it really is a very serious situation that within the European Union you have that type of behaviour and it is very revealing of the relationship between the Hungarian government and the Russian government. … It’s unacceptable.

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Supply shock caused by Iran war ‘probably worst ever,’ Irish PM warns

Irish prime minister Micheál Martin has warned that the oil supply shock caused by the US-Israeli attack on Iran is “probably the worst ever,” as he sounded alarm over the supply and inflationary impacts on the global economy.

Poland’s prime minister Donald Tusk and Ireland’s taoiseach Micheál Martin seen in the clock room for a meeting at the Chancellery in Warsaw, Poland. Photograph: Omar Marques/Getty Images

He also said there will be “ongoing advice in terms of conservation of energy” with the government “urging people to use it as wisely as possible.”

Speaking in Warsaw alongside Poland’s prime minister Donald Tusk, Martin said:

“It’s very serious, and the supply shock is probably the worst ever, much more severe than even in the 1970s supply shock. On two fronts, inflation, inflationary impacts, and on supply implications.

We’ve set up a subgroup to look at the supply issue and there will be ongoing advice in terms of conservation of energy and urging people to use it as wisely as possible, and that is being kept under constant review.

On the economic impacts, we are concerned … We are very concious that this could go on, no one is quite certain what is round the corner, so we have to be cautious in terms of how we intervene.

But we are very concerned in terms of secondary impacts on economy … and that is why we would urge that the war would end. The implications are … first of all, it is causing too much death, construction and injury to people, but as well as that it’s causing huge economic dislocation around the world with very serious consequences for people’s livelihoods and that is a concern for us.”

In response, Tusk said the situation was “extraordinary” as he talked about his government’s move to cap fuel prices among other measures responding to the crisis.

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