Hungarian President to Skip Bucharest Nine Summit Amid Russia Tensions

Hungary's President Tamas Sulyok will not attend the upcoming Bucharest Nine summit in Riga. The event will instead issue a statement from the presidents of Latvia, Romania, and Poland. Hungary's stance on Russia and Ukraine has led to tensions with other central European nations within NATO and the EU.


Reuters | Updated: 11-06-2024 02:46 IST | Created: 11-06-2024 02:46 IST
Hungarian President to Skip Bucharest Nine Summit Amid Russia Tensions

Hungary's President Tamas Sulyok will not attend the summit of the Bucharest Nine, a group of European countries on the eastern edge of NATO in Riga on Tuesday, Latvian president's office said. The summit will not end with a joint declaration of the nine countries, the office added, for the first time since the format was established in 2015.

Instead, a statement will be issued in the name of the presidents of Latvia, Romania and Poland, who jointly host the Riga gathering, a spokesperson for Latvian President Edgars Rinkevics told Reuters on Monday. Hungary and the other central European nations have been at odds over Prime Minister Viktor Orban's continued cultivation of close ties to Russia and refusal to give arms to Ukraine.

"Hungary will be represented by the Ambassador to Latvia", said the spokesperson. She referred to Sulyok's office "for questions related to the Hungarian president's agenda".

The Hungarian president's office did not immediatelly reply to the request for comment, which was sent outside working hours. The presidents of Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania and Slovakia are usually represented at the annual summits of the Buharest Nine grouping. Thare countries are members of both NATO and the European Union.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, who will be at the Riga summit, will visit Budapest the next day "to discuss Hungary's staying out from NATO's Ukraine mission", Orban told state media earlier on Monday. Hungary signalled last week it had no plans to abandon natural gas imports from Russia and sought to deepen business ties with Moscow in non-sanctioned areas.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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