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Hungary seeks cooperation with Italy and Austria on migrant crisis

They seek to preserve their traditional Christian, European, way of life going forward

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto expressed on Monday his optimism about working with the Austrian and Italian governments on a coordinated policy to control the flood of migrants into their countries, citing that their views on the matter are extremely similar in their approach.

Hungary has heretofore balked at the idea of taking in Muslim migrants over concerns about preserving the traditional Christian composition of the country, a policy perspective that is shared by the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Poland.

With the new political climate in Italy following its recent election which has brought a more right wing tilt to the fore, Szijarto hopes to strike an accord with Rome, which is enacting a new political perspective based on the migrant issue, to develop a more unified front against the Muslim migrant onslaught facing Europe. Reuters reports:

Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said on Monday that the approach to migration of the Vienna government and the center-right in Italy was very similar to the bloc’s central European member states.

“So it is obvious that we will work together in the future,” he told Reuters in an interview.

“This is not against the western part of Europe, this is against migration, and this is in favor of our interests because we put security first.”

A bitter row over migration policy sparked by the biggest influx of refugees into the European Union since World War Two has undermined trust within the bloc and weakened its unity, with its eastern states refusing to sign up to a quota system favored by several richer members to the west and north.

In refusing to accept Muslim refugees, Hungary and its neighbors in the Visegrad group – the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia – have cited security concerns and the desire to preserve the traditional Christian make-up of their societies.

In Austria, Chancellor Sebastian Kurz formed a coalition with the Freedom Party following an election last year dominated by the issue of migration, making the country the only one in western Europe with a far-right grouping in government.

In Italy this month, the governing center-left Democratic Party lost out to anti-establishment and right-wing parties that campaigned hard against immigration in an election that delivered a hung parliament.

‘MORE EFFICIENT’ COOPERATION

Szijjarto said the Visegrad countries had no plans to enlarge that alliance, but this should not prevent closer ties with like-minded states.

“What we definitely would like to do is to have a closer and more efficient cooperation with Austria and of course hopefully with the upcoming Italian government,” he said.

Kurz said on Friday that Austria planned to use its presidency of the European Union this year to shift the bloc’s focus away from resettling refugees within the EU and towards preventing further waves of arrivals.

He also pledged closer cooperation with Hungary after meeting Prime Minister Viktor Orban at the end of January.

Orban has been one of the EU’s hardliners on migration and is campaigning on a fierce anti-immigration agenda ahead of Hungary’s own national election on April 8, when he will seek a third term in office.

Asked about a recent video in which Janos Lazar, the top aide to Orban, blamed immigrants for pushing out “white Christians” in a district of Vienna, Szijjarto said he did not think the comments were unfortunate. Facebook first removed the video then reversed its decision.

“It is an open issue in Austria that the number of Muslim kids to be enrolled in Vienna schools is approaching the number of the Austrian kids to be enrolled. That is an open debate…,” Szijjarto said.

This form of cooperation would witness an even greater degree of cohesiveness in European domestic polity wherein these states can acknowledge and treat of a threat that is increasingly becoming existential in nature as the ongoing flood of migrants coming from the Middle East threatens the nations’ demographic homogeneity by violently introducing alien and sometimes hostile customs.

France, Sweden, Germany, Britain, Italy, and others, are struggling to come to terms with the new realities that they face as the make up of their nation has radically changed in a very short time with the extreme differences of social mores and customs acting as a sort of breeding ground for distrust and violence, even leading to so-called no-go zones where locals fear to go for fear of being violently assaulted, raped, or killed.

Poland, Hungary, Austria, and some of their neighbors have each individually cited some of these issues as part of their policy to refuse to allow migrants from Muslim majority countries refuge within their borders, and with the prospect of a new international policy reflecting these perspectives, they hope to strengthen their resolve to preserve their traditional Christian, European, way of life going forward.

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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

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