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Hungary took over the chairmanship of the Council of Ministers of the Council of Europe (CoE) from Germany at a meeting in Hamburg on Friday.

Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, said after the meeting at which he briefed participants about the Hungarian Presidency’s programme running until Nov. 17, that Hungary had chosen three priority areas: national minority protection, religious communities, and the rights of children and families.

Justice Minister Presents Hungary Upcoming Presidency Priorities, Programmes to CoE SecGen
Justice Minister Presents Hungary Upcoming Presidency Priorities, Programmes to CoE SecGen

Judit Varga, the justice minister, gave an outline of priorities for Hungary’s upcoming Council of Europe (CoE) presidency starting in May to the council’s Secretary-General Marija Pejčinović Burić at their meeting in Strasbourg on Wednesday. “Hungary has been, for centuries, a devoted participant and shaper in the development of law in Europe. While appreciating the […]Continue reading

Concerning the protection of national minorities, Szijjártó highlighted Minority SafePack, an initiative urging European Union protection for national and linguistic minorities in the bloc, which the European Commission had not added to its agenda. The minister said he hoped Hungary’s chairmanship of the CoE council of ministers would lead to “Strasbourg doing a better job than Brussels”.

As regards the protection of religious communities, Szijjártó noted the issue of the persecution of Christians “in Europe’s neighbourhood”. He said it was especially worrying that protests against the Israel-Palestine conflict had recently taken an “anti-Semitic turn” in several European countries.

Turning to the protection of children and families, the minister said the pandemic had forced many children to “join the digital space without experience”, making them vulnerable to cyber criminals and predators.

Szijjártó said the protection of families and children required broad European regulation, adding that Hungary, too, was introducing strict regulations in this area.

Szijjártó also said that the CoE provided a sufficient platform for “relaunching civilised dialogue” between the East and the West, which he said was all the more necessary in light of growing political conflicts.

Being a central and eastern European country, Hungary’s interest lies in dialogue, rather than conflict, he said.

Hungary Alone Blocks EU’s Pro-Hongkong Stance Against China Once Again
Hungary Alone Blocks EU’s Pro-Hongkong Stance Against China Once Again

Foreign Minister Szijjártó previously described sanctions against China over human rights abuses against the Uyghur minority group as “pointless, self-aggrandizing and harmful.”Continue reading

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas pledged his country’s support for the Hungarian presidency, adding that common values should guide its work.

Marija Pejcinovic Buric, the CoE’s secretary general, said the outgoing German presidency had “set a high bar”, adding that multilateral cooperation to protect human rights, democracy and the rule of law was “perhaps more important than ever.”

In the featured photo: Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó (on the left) with his German counterpart, Heiko Maas. Photo by MTI/EPA/DPA/Marcus Brandt


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