The Standard (St. Catharines)

Romanian president angers Hungarians

- PABLO GORONDI

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Hungary’s government on Friday condemned provocativ­e comments by Romania’s prime minister about the autonomy efforts by Szeklers, a group of ethnic Hungarians in Romania.

Romanian Prime Minister Mihai Tudose said Wednesday on Realitatea TV that “if the Szekler flag flies on institutio­ns there, they’ll all fly next to the flag.”

In Hungary, the comments were taken to mean that they should be hanged.

Tudose “practicall­y threatened a national minority and its representa­tives with execution,” Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said. “This is totally unacceptab­le and unworthy of Europe, European values and the 21st century.”

Szijjarto said that his ministry had summoned Romania’s ambassador to express Hungary’s position about the statements. Szijjarto said Tudose needed to “rectify this situation at the earliest opportunit­y.”

Romania’s foreign ministry replied that Tudose’s comments did not contain any “anti-Hungarian connotatio­ns,” but were about “the necessity to respect the constituti­onal order and law in Romania, a unitary, sovereign and indivisibl­e state.”

The foreign ministry added that “initiative­s regarding diverse forms of territoria­l autonomy based on ethnic criteria have multiplied recently, which is regrettabl­e” as Romania has undertaken “substantia­l measures in favour of the Hungarian minority over time.”

Political parties in Hungary across the political spectrum joined in condemning Tudose’s remarks. The left-leaning Together opposition party said the comments “recall the darkest eras of history,” while the nationalis­t Jobbik party said they were part of “the series of the anti-Hungarian attacks in the recent years.”

The rights of around 1.2 million ethnic Hungarians in Romania, including about 700,000 Szeklers in eastern Transylvan­ia, has been at the centre of political feuds between the two countries for decades. Hungary lost Transylvan­ia in the peace treaties after the First World War.

Tudose’s comments will likely strain relations between his governing left-wing coalition and the main party representi­ng the interests of ethnic Hungarians in Romania, which formally supports the ruling coalition.

 ?? ZOLTAN MATHE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Peter Szijjarto, holds a press conference on Friday in response to remarks by Romanian Prime Minister Mihai Tudose suggesting ethnic Hungarians in Romania should be hanged if they try to seek autonomy.
ZOLTAN MATHE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Peter Szijjarto, holds a press conference on Friday in response to remarks by Romanian Prime Minister Mihai Tudose suggesting ethnic Hungarians in Romania should be hanged if they try to seek autonomy.

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