Global Times

Hungary to offer land to planned Chinese school in ‘ positive step’

- By Xu Keyue and Hu Yuwei

Hungary’s parliament approved a government proposal on Tuesday to donate state- owned land to a planned Chinese university in Budapest, despite the country’s opposition party’s call to postpone the project for political gains. Chinese observers called the approval a positive step in developing cultural and educationa­l cooperatio­n.

Lawmakers of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s ruling Fidesz voted overwhelmi­ngly to donate four plots on the banks of the Danube River to a foundation in charge of the planned branch of China’s Fudan University in Budapest.

Orban’s government said that the school could help attract new research and developmen­t centers and new investment to Hungary, a Central European country of 10 million people, which relies heavily on foreign investment to drive its economic growth.

The approval suggested that the Orban government is supporting the project despite the domestic political farce staged by the opposition party, said Zhang Hong, an associate research fellow at the Institute of Russian, Eastern European and Central Asian Studies of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Such a decision, or a positive step, reflects the strong determinat­ion of the Hungarian government to develop cultural and educationa­l cooperatio­n with China, Zhang noted.

After a march in Budapest against Hungary’s plan to build the Chinese school – a move incited by the country’s opposition party to stigmatize the cultural exchanges for political gain – Orban last week appeared to suspend the plan and offered to hold a referendum on the project in 2023. The move reflected the hurdles ahead in ties between China and Hungary, marred by few opposition politician­s’ ulterior motives to hijack China- Hungary and China- EU ties.

Reuters said the Hungarian government must present the final plans for the project, including costs, to parliament by the end of 2022, after the next election in April.

Chinese observers cautioned that the latest approval can’t be regarded as a final victory, as the opposition has never given up interferin­g with and smearing the initiative.

“I recommend the project to be suspended until there is a stable political environmen­t in Hungary after the general election next year. The project should not be turned into a political tool by the opposition to attack China and the current Orban government anymore,” Zhang suggested.

“The stigmatiza­tion can demonize China’s image among locals, which is not wise for longterm China- Hungary ties,” Zhang said.

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