The Ukrainian leader’s suggestion that his military should speak personally with the Hungarian prime minister “in its own language” has upset has backers in Brussels
Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky © Charles McQuillan / Getty Images
[RT] The
European Commission has criticized Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky for
threatening Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, calling his comments
unacceptable.
Earlier this week, the Ukrainian leader issued a
thinly veiled warning to Orban over Budapest’s ongoing refusal to lift a
veto on billions in EU-backed loans for Kiev.
Zelensky had said that if the “one person,” understood to be Orban, didn’t sign off on the money, “we will give this person’s address to our guys so they can call him and speak to him in their language.” The message came amid an ongoing row over Ukraine’s blocking of a pipeline delivering Russian oil to Hungary.
“Specifically in relation to the comments made by President Zelensky, we are very clear as the European Commission that that type of language is not acceptable,” Commission deputy chief spokesperson Olof Gill said on Friday during a press briefing. “There must not be threats against EU member states.”
Commenting on the threats, Orban stated, “We will break the oil blockade, and no threats to my life will deter me from doing so.” Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said the Ukrainian leader had crossed “all limits,” arguing the intimidation was a response to Budapest’s refusal to “pay the price of Ukraine’s war” through higher energy costs.
The
political row between Budapest and Kiev escalated in January, when
Ukraine prevented key Russian oil supplies from reaching Hungary via the
Druzhba pipeline which run through Ukraine, claimin it had been damaged
by Russian strikes – claims Moscow rejects. Hungary and Slovakia have
accused Kiev of intentionally halting the flows for political reasons.
As
tensions between Kiev and Budapest intensified, the sides resorted to
personal insults. Zelensky even went as far as to mock Orban’s weight at
the Munich Security Conference in February. Later in the month, Orban
blocked the planned €90 billion ($106 billion) emergency loan raised by
EU members for Kiev.
Most recently, Budapest has seized some $80 million worth of
cash and another $20 million in gold bars that was being transported to
Ukraine through Hungary in security vans by a Ukrainian team led by a
former secret service general. The seizure prompted Ukraine's Foreign
Minister Andrey Sybiga to accuse Budapest of kidnapping.
Moscow maintains that Ukraine’s blocking of Russian oil supplies to EU members via its territory amounts to “energy blackmail.” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said Kiev is exerting pressure on Budapest by disrupting the transit of Russian oil.