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Orban steps up oil accusations against Ukraine after vetoing EU loan to Kyiv

Hungary’s prime minister accuses Ukraine of imposing an “oil blockade” after Kyiv says a critical pipeline was closed following Russian strikes.​Hungary’s prime minister accuses Ukraine of imposing an “oil blockade” after Kyiv says a critical pipeline was closed following Russian strikes. 

Orban steps up oil accusations against Ukraine after vetoing EU loan to Kyiv

Harry Sekulichand
Paul Kirby,Europe digital editor
Getty Images Viktor Orban, Hungary's prime minister, delivers a speech in January. He has short, grey hair and is wearing a shirt, suit and tie.Getty Images

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban says he has stationed soldiers at key energy facilities across the country after he blamed Ukraine for disrupting energy supplies.

Orban, who is trailing in opinion polls ahead of pivotal elections next month, has accused Kyiv of imposing an “oil blockade” on Hungary by deliberately delaying the reopening of the Druzhba pipeline.

Ukraine says the pipeline was damaged by Russian strikes last month and its repair crews have been injured by further attacks.

Druzhba is the main route for delivering Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia and shipments of Russian oil to both countries have been cut off since 27 January.

The Hungarian leader, who is seen as Russia’s closest partner in the EU, argues the suspension of the critical oil flow is purely political and has accused Ukraine of “preparing further actions”, including sabotage, four years into Russia’s full-scale war.

However, Orban’s critics say he has been stepping up the war of words with Ukraine in order to convince the public that Hungary is under attack in the run-up to the 12 April vote. Most opinion polls suggest his Fidesz party is at risk of losing power after 16 years.

This week he vetoed a €90bn (£78bn) EU loan to Ukraine and blocked the 20th package of sanctions on Moscow.

In an open letter on social media on Thursday, he accused Ukraine, the EU and opposition parties of “co-ordinating efforts to bring a pro-Ukraine government to power in Hungary”.

The EU has urged Kyiv to speed up reopening the pipeline, but Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky said “they advise us to repair it, but they know that there have already been attacks on Druzhba”.

Map showing two strands of a pipeline from Russia into Europe in red. One strand goes through Hungary into Ukraine before connecting to another strand going into Russia.

Slovakia’s leader Robert Fico, also seen as one of Russia’s closest European partners, has accused Zelensky of stalling. On Monday, his government said it would stop providing emergency power supplies to Ukraine until oil supplies resumed through the pipeline.

Ukraine has had to increase imports from its European neighbours because of acute power shortages throughout the winter caused by intensified Russian attacks on its electricity and gas networks.

The European Commission made clear on Wednesday that while Hungary and Slovakia had begun using their emergency oil supplies there was no risk of a shortages and there were alternative sources for both countries.

“Croatia confirmed… that non-Russian crude oil is being transported through the Adria pipeline to Hungary and Slovakia,” European Commission spokesperson Anna-Kaisa Itkonen said after experts met to discuss the situation.

“It remains the main alternative pipeline for Hungary and Slovakia to cover their needs, and the pipeline has sufficient capacity to increase volumes to fully cover the Hungarian Slovakian requirements,” she said.

Ukraine’s military has repeatedly attacked Russian oil facilities inside Russia itself, and a Ukrainian drone strike hit an oil pumping station in Tatarstan earlier this week.

The attacks forced Russia’s oil operator to reduce the amount of crude oil it takes into its system by about 250,000 barrels a day, according to Reuters news agency.

In his message on Thursday, Orban accused Zelensky of blocking the Druzhba pipeline as an “anti-Hungarian policy”, a day after he accused Kyiv of “preparing further actions to disrupt Hungary’s energy system”.

Following a meeting of the Hungarian Defence Council on Wednesday, he said soldiers had been deployed to energy stations, police would patrol power stations, and drones were banned in Hungary’s north-east border region with Ukraine.

There is no indication that Ukraine is planning any kind of attack, and its armed forces are already severely stretched in a four-year full-scale Russian invasion along a front line of about 1,200km (750 miles).

Zelensky did not immediately respond to the accusation, however Orban has long sought to portray Kyiv as trying to drag Hungary into the war, and he has repeatedly tried to block financial aid to Ukraine.

 

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Iran will continue to defend itself against aggression, ambassador to UK says

​ Iran will continue to defend itself against aggression, ambassador to UK says. 35 minutes ago. Laura KuenssbergPresenter, Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg. Iran will continue to defend itself if the “aggression from the American and Israeli side continues”, the Iranian ambassador to the UK has told the BBC.. While Iran’s president on Saturday apologised to its Gulf neighbours and promised to stop attacks, Seyed Ali Mousavi told Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg their policy remained to “defend themselves”.. After days of strikes across the Middle East caused enormous disruption and damage in many different countries, Mousavi said that “if facilities or properties or bases are used against the Iranian nation”, they would be considered “legitimate targets”.. In the last few hours, Gulf countries including Qatar and the UAE have been hit by Iran, while the US and Israel have continued their attacks as the war enters a second week.. Follow live updates. Military chief defends UK response to Middle East conflict. We’ve been speaking to Iranians during one week of war. Here’s what they said. Trump wants to pick Iran’s new leader – will a hostile regime under fire agree?. In an exclusive interview with the BBC to be broadcast on Sunday, Mousavi was asked if Iran would stop its attacks on military bases outside Israel in other parts of the Middle East.. He said there is “willingness from the Iranian side not to strike, not to attack our neighbours”.. But he maintained that Iran had the right to continue striking targets across the whole region where there were military bases.. Mousavi said Iran’s response “depends on the activities of the Americans and the Israeli regime”.. “If the aggression… continues there is no doubt we will defend ourselves,” he said. “And if they want to use these military bases – although we don’t want to do that – there is no doubt we will defend ourselves accordingly.”. It has been more than seven days since the US and Israel began strikes on Iran, which led Tehran to retaliate with its own attacks across the region.. Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman and Iraq have all been hit, as has an RAF base in Cyprus.. It is rare for the leadership of a country like Iran to apologise, let alone in public.. And it is rare for a representative of Iran to agree to be interviewed.. But in the wake of President Masoud Pezeshkian’s apology, Iran’s ambassador to the UK agreed to our request to speak to him, and even more unusually, invited us to speak to him in Iran’s embassy in London, a building that tells the story of the fraught and troubled history between Iran and the West.. The building, on the edge of London’s Hyde Park, is where five Iranian gunmen were killed after a dramatic siege that was brought to an end by SAS commandos in 1980.. Nineteen hostages were set free, but one died and two were injured in the crossfire.. The gunmen belonged to a dissident Iranian group opposed to Ayatollah Khomeini, the religious lea  

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Heavy rains and flooding kills at least 23 in Nairobi

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Russian strike on Kharkiv apartment block kills ten

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We’ve been speaking to Iranians during one week of war. Here’s what they said

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Swiss to vote on right-wing push to slash licence fee for public broadcaster

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