logo
Hungary bans three Ukrainian military officials from entering its territory

Hungary bans three Ukrainian military officials from entering its territory

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Hungary on Thursday banned three Ukrainian military officials from its territory over the death in Ukraine of a Hungarian-Ukrainian dual citizen, as diplomatic relations between the neighboring countries rapidly deteriorate.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán last week accused Ukrainian authorities of beating the man to death during his mobilization in the Ukrainian military.
Ukraine, which has been battling against a full-scale invasion by Russia since February 2022, has rejected Orbán's claim, saying the man was a Ukrainian citizen who had left his military unit without authorization and later checked himself into a hospital which found no signs of physical injury indicating violence.
Ukrainian officials have promised a full investigation into the man's death, which they said had been caused by a pulmonary embolism. But Orbán and media outlets associated with his government have continually insisted that the man was beaten to death by military recruiters, despite providing no conclusive evidence.
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó told a news conference Thursday that Hungary would ban three military officials in response to the death. He did not name them, but said they were a head of personnel for the military, a regional commander and a Defense Ministry official in charge of mobilization.
Szijjártó added that Hungary's government on Wednesday had requested that the three individuals be put on a European Union sanctions list.
'Until the sanctions are implemented, we have today taken measures to ban all three individuals from entering Hungary,' he said.
Orbán, a vehement critic of Kyiv and its fight to ward off Russia's invasion, has charted a starkly different course than his EU partners in his approach to Ukraine, refusing to supply it with weapons or allow their transit through Hungarian territory, demanding sanctions relief and rapprochement with Russia, and adopting a combative stance toward both Kyiv and its EU backers.
In recent weeks, he has escalated a sweeping anti-Ukraine campaign and lobbied intensely against the embattled country's eventual accession into the EU, portraying Ukraine's membership in the bloc as an existential threat that would bring war, crime and economic ruin.
Last month, Orbán blocked a common position in the European Council on support for Ukraine and its path toward EU citizenship, the only leader among the bloc's 27 member states to do so.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tariffs on Russia Could Hurt Wary U.S. Farmers
Tariffs on Russia Could Hurt Wary U.S. Farmers

New York Times

time14 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Tariffs on Russia Could Hurt Wary U.S. Farmers

American farmers are bracing for another blow should President Trump proceed with his plan to impose steep tariffs on goods imported from Russia, raising the price of a key ingredient in crop production. The United States imported $1.3 billion worth of fertilizer — mostly in the form of urea and urea ammonium nitrate — from Russia last year and is on a pace to bring in even more this year. Farmers of row crops like corn and soybeans, the biggest users of fertilizer, are already dealing with low sales prices and cannot afford rising input costs or a slowdown in supply. Mr. Trump threatened this week to levy a 100 percent tariff against Russia, as well as high tariffs against countries that do business with Russia, if there isn't a cease-fire in the war in Ukraine within 50 days. It was not clear whether fertilizer would be exempted or not, or whether Russia would face tariffs, additional sanctions or a combination of the two. 'We already know these companies that are either importing fertilizer or otherwise in the stream, they are building in the potential for disaster into the cost already,' Rob Larew, the president of the National Farmers Union, said in an interview. He said he worried that rising costs would force farmers to give up farming and sell their land. Most farmers use fertilizers that contain one of three main elements: phosphorus, potassium and nitrogen. Russia exports of urea and urea ammonium nitrate supply nitrogen, while potash is a source of potassium. Urea ammonium nitrate imports are under the most threat, said Allan Pickett, the head of fertilizer analysis at S&P Capital's agribusiness unit, since the United States imports 46 percent of that type of compound from Russia. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Trump gives Putin strict ultimatum to make a deal on Ukraine or face consequences
Trump gives Putin strict ultimatum to make a deal on Ukraine or face consequences

Fox News

time14 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Trump gives Putin strict ultimatum to make a deal on Ukraine or face consequences

President Donald Trump put Russian President Vladimir Putin on a 50-day clock. To drive Putin to a deal on Ukraine, Trump has a new plan: massive air defenses backed up by the Trump doctrine, where rade wins wars. But what's truly at stake is Trump's unique vision for U.S. power and prosperity. In the Oval Office with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Monday, July 14, Trump announced more U.S. aid to Ukraine and a 100% tariff to hit Russia's oil customers like China by early September. "I use trade for a lot of things ... it's good for settling wars," Trump said. Trump cited the example of how he employed trade threats to simmer down India and Pakistan in May. However, as he said Monday, "The only one we haven't been able to get to yet is Russia." So, Trump has turned up the heat. The 100% tariffs would hit the $240 billion Russia-China trade and reverberate to India, Brazil and others. This tariff appears to be distinct from the potential 500% secondary sanctions in the Senate bill co-sponsored by Republican South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham and Connecticut Democrat Sen. Richard Blumenthal, which Trump views as a back-up plan. The second component of Trump's new strategy is to deprive Putin of gains from the mass air barrages of drones and missiles attacking Ukraine. Significantly, Trump has now put his personal backing behind aid to Ukraine in the form of a surge of air defenses. Trump and Rutte discussed no less than 17 Patriot air defense batteries. That's astonishing, considering that Ukraine has six batteries in operation now, including three from the U.S. and others sent from Germany, Poland and Romania. Patriot is the gold standard for air defense. It's a full commitment by Trump and NATO to stopping Putin's brutal war. Trump is also brandishing Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles like a stiletto in a street fight. TLAMs could swiftly decimate Russia's air force. Trump says he won't give Ukraine TLAMs or other long-range missiles that could hit targets in Russia just now, but then, we all remember the head-fake prior to the B-2 strike on Iran, don't we? Russia has taken 100,000 casualties since January for paltry ground gains. With Trump empowering NATO, Putin is targeting Ukraine's power grid and infrastructure alongside indiscriminate terror attacks. The salvos consist mainly of Iranian Shahed drones, some of which are now manufactured in Russia, along with decoys. Each barrage includes a handful of weapons that are hard to intercept: Iskander ballistic missiles, KH-101 cruise missiles and even old Soviet air defense missiles converted for ground attack. The bad news is that Russia has literally thousands of older missile types. Ukraine's air defenders are top notch, due to considerable assistance from the U.S, NATO partners and others. Sophisticated monitoring and tracking have enabled Ukraine to shoot down most of Putin's air weapons, but this spring's saturation attacks have been challenging. Air defense is a group effort. The joint U.S.-Norwegian NASAMS use the converted AIM-120 fighter plane air-to-air missile and boast a 94% success rate. Another favorite is the "Frankenstein SAM" which combines old Soviet-style Buk launchers rewired by clever Americans to fire U.S. missiles like the Sea Sparrow. Australia has deployed its sophisticated E-7 Wedgetail radar surveillance plane to monitor drone and missile trajectories for intercept. If worse comes to worst, a few NATO partner F-35s could scour the skies. Done right, the air defenses and TLAM threats will diminish the damage to Ukraine and secure Europe against Russia's ongoing weapons build-up, too. There is nothing the NATO allies want more than to protect their strategic ports, railways and capitals from any threat of Russian drones and missiles. Air defense also ties back to Trump's primary goal, which is a ceasefire to stop the killing and a peace deal that will leave Ukraine with a viable economy. He's already shifted more of the financial burden to NATO and is a good sign that the European Union on Wednesday proposed $116 billion for Ukraine's economic reconstruction. Make no mistake. This is very high stakes move by President Trump. Success with the squeeze of secondary sanctions will take agile behind-the-scenes negotiation and a bit of luck. If his stratagem works, Trump will have proved the duo of tariffs and selective military power can defeat the Russia-China cabal. America will be in a strong position to reconfigure our military posture and economic strategy to face down China's global menace.

EU hits Russia with sweeping new sanctions over Ukraine war
EU hits Russia with sweeping new sanctions over Ukraine war

News24

time14 minutes ago

  • News24

EU hits Russia with sweeping new sanctions over Ukraine war

The EU on Friday adopted a sweeping new package of sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine war, looking to pile more pressure on the Kremlin by lowering a price cap for Moscow's oil exports. The 18th round of economic measures from Europe against Russia since its 2022 invasion comes as allies hope US President Donald Trump follows through on his threat to punish Moscow for stalling peace efforts. The new measures were approved after Slovakia dropped a weeks-long block following talks with Brussels over separate plans to phase out Russian gas imports. The EU on Friday adopted a sweeping new package of sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine war, looking to pile more pressure on the Kremlin by lowering a price cap for Moscow's oil exports. The 18th round of economic measures from Europe against Russia since its 2022 invasion comes as allies hope US President Donald Trump follows through on his threat to punish Moscow for stalling peace efforts. "The EU just approved one of its strongest sanctions packages against Russia to date," EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said. "The message is clear: Europe will not back down in its support for Ukraine. The EU will keep raising the pressure until Russia ends its war." Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky hailed the sanctions' adoption as "essential and timely". The new measures were approved after Slovakia dropped a weeks-long block following talks with Brussels over separate plans to phase out Russian gas imports. Kremlin-friendly Slovakian leader Robert Fico - whose country remains dependent on Russian energy - dropped his opposition after getting what he called "guarantees" from Brussels over future gas prices. France's foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot called the latest moves "unprecedented" and said that "together with the United States we will force (Russian President) Vladimir Putin into a ceasefire". As part of the new sanctions designed to sap Russia's war chest, diplomats said the EU has agreed to lower its price cap on Russian oil exported to third countries around the world, to 15 percent below market value. That comes despite EU allies failing to convince US President Donald Trump to go along with the plan. READ | The cap is a G7 initiative aimed at limiting the amount of money Russia makes by exporting oil to countries across the globe such as China and India. Set at $60 by the G7 in 2022, it is designed to limit the price Moscow can sell oil around the world by banning shipping firms and insurance companies dealing with Russia to export above that amount. The EU has largely already cut off its imports of Russian oil. Under the new EU scheme -- which is expected to get the backing of G7 allies like Britain and Canada -- the new level will start off at $47.6 and can be adjusted as oil prices change in the future. EU officials admit that the scheme will not be as effective without US involvement. Tankers, refinery, banks In addition, officials said the EU is blacklisting over 100 more vessels in the "shadow fleet" of ageing tankers used by Russia to circumvent oil export curbs. There are also measures to stop the defunct Baltic Sea gas pipelines Nord Stream 1 and 2 from being brought back online. Among other targets, sanctions will be placed on a Russian-owned oil refinery in India and two Chinese banks as the EU seeks to curb Moscow's ties with international partners. There is also an expanded transaction ban on dealings with Russian banks and more restrictions on the export of "dual-use" goods that could be used on the battlefield in Ukraine. READ | Ramaphosa and Canada's Mark Carney agree on alignment of G20, G7 agendas during call The latest round of EU measures comes after Trump on Monday threatened to hit buyers of Russian energy with massive "secondary tariffs" if Russia doesn't halt the fighting in 50 days. The move from Trump represented a dramatic pivot from his previous effort of rapprochement with the Kremlin, as he said his patience was running out with Putin. The multiple rounds of international sanctions imposed on Moscow in the three-and-a-half years since its invasion have failed so far to cripple the Russian economy or slow its war effort. But Western officials argue that despite Russia's economy largely weathering the punishment to this point, key economic indicators such as interest rates and inflation are getting worse.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store