Europe

European Parliament wants to exclude Hungary from Schengen due to eased entry of Russians

The European Parliament wants to suspend Hungary’s membership in the Schengen area because of the country’s decision to make Russian nationals’ entry easier.

On September 18, the European Parliament held a debate on Hungary’s decision to ease entry for Russians and Belarusians, where MEPs called for a retaliatory suspension of Hungary’s membership in the Schengen area. This was reported by Telex.

During the debate, European Commission representative Stella Kyriakides noted that Hungary had simplified entry for two countries hostile to the EU, which raises questions against the backdrop of increased Russian sabotage in Europe.

She recalled that the European Commission had twice asked the Hungarian authorities about the Hungarian measures, as they still did not understand why it was necessary.

The MEPs who spoke, ranging from the centre-right European People’s Party to the Socialists and the Greens, generally criticised the Hungarian measures.

Csaba Molnar, a Hungarian MEP from the opposition Democratic Coalition party, argued that the Hungarian government had opened the door for spies, Russia’s sleeper agents, and war criminals.

The main speaker from the Liberals, Fabienne Keller, said that the European Commission had not responded adequately and therefore called on the EU Council and member states to “consider suspending Hungary’s membership in the Schengen area.”

A representative of the “soft” Eurosceptics from the “European Conservatives and Reformists,” Maciej Wasik, insisted that there should be no easing of sanctions against Russia, including visa sanctions, saying that “Putin’s Russia must be isolated.”

In July Hungary published details of a new visa fast-track system for citizens of eight countries, including Russia and Belarus, who will be able to enter Hungary without security checks or other restrictions. 

Budapest said that many of them will build a nuclear power plant using Russian technology.

Hungary’s decision sparked criticism from many EU nations, while Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto claimed that it does not pose a risk to the Schengen area.

Ihor Petrenko

I'm a passionate journalist based in Ukraine, specialising in covering local news and events from Ukraine for the Western audience. Also, I work as a fixer for foreign media. Whether I write an article, report from the conflict zone or conduct interviews with political leaders and experts, I'm focused on delivering informative, engaging, and thought-generating content.

Recent Posts

“I Dream of Making Luhansk Ukrainian Again”: How Volodymyr Zhemchuhov Debunks Propaganda About Donbas

Volodymyr Zhemchuhov was born 80 kilometres from the Russian border, speaks Russian as his mother…

5 days ago

Ukraine Ammunition Coalition Shrinks as Nine Countries Pull Funding

The Czech-led initiative that has supplied Ukraine with more than four million large-calibre artillery shells…

6 days ago

UK Targets Russian Crypto Networks and Shadow Finance in New Sanctions Push

The UK has announced a new package of sanctions targeting cryptocurrency exchanges and illicit financial…

6 days ago

‘Smoke Screen’: Latvia Rejects Russia’s Claim of Rights Violations Against Ethnic Russians

Latvia's foreign ministry has dismissed Moscow's threat to take the Baltic states to the International…

6 days ago

Paris Opens National Probe Into Foreign Smear Campaign Against Left-Wing Candidates

Paris prosecutors have launched an independent investigation into an alleged foreign influence operation that targeted…

6 days ago

Iceland Heads Into EU Referendum Under Threat of Foreign Interference and AI Manipulation

Iceland's foreign minister has warned that the country's August referendum on resuming EU accession talks…

6 days ago