World

Hungary says Sweden should ‘act differently’ if it wants to join NATO

January 31, 2023
Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Peter Szijjarto seen in this file photo.
Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Peter Szijjarto seen in this file photo.

BUDAPEST — Sweden’s government should “act differently” if it wants to clinch Turkish support for its bid to join NATO, Hungary’s foreign minister said Tuesday, adding that a recent Qur'an-burning protest outside the Turkish embassy in Stockholm was “unacceptable.”

Peter Szijjarto made the remark at a news conference following talks with his Turkish counterpart Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu in Hungary’s capital Budapest. Both diplomats addressed the Jan. 21 anti-Turkish protest that increased tensions between Ankara and Stockholm as Sweden seeks Turkey’s approval to join the NATO military alliance.

“As a Christian and as a Catholic, I must say that burning of a holy book of another religion is an unacceptable act,” Szijjarto said, and criticized a statement by Sweden’s prime minister that while the burning of the Qur’an was inappropriate and “deeply disrespectful,” it fell under Swedish freedom of speech protections.



“Stating that the burning of a sacred book is part of freedom of speech is just plain stupidity,” Szijjarto said, adding that “perhaps they (Sweden) should act differently than that” if they want to secure Ankara’s backing.

The meeting in Budapest came as Turkey and Hungary remain the only two NATO members that haven’t approved bids by Sweden and Finland to join the military alliance.

The northern European neighbors — Finland has the EU’s longest border with Russia — have been closely aligned with NATO for decades but only applied for full membership after Moscow invaded Ukraine.

The unanimous approval and treaty ratification of all 30 NATO countries is necessary to admit new members.

Cavusoglu said Turkey shares Hungary’s wish for NATO enlargement, but that it was now “impossible for us to confirm (Sweden’s) accession” into the alliance.

He called the Qur’an-burning protest a “provocation which will take us nowhere, it can only lead to chaos.”

Ankara has also said it’s displeased with Sweden’s efforts to crack down on groups that it considers to be terrorist or pose a threat to the country, including Kurdish groups.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said that Sweden should not expect Turkey’s support in its membership bid.

Hungary’s government was expected to vote on accepting Sweden and Finland into NATO by the end of last year. The issue will be on the Hungarian parliament’s agenda during its first session of the year in February, Szijjarto said.

Szijjarto said Hungary has a “clear standpoint” on admitting Sweden and Finland into NATO, but would not attempt to influence Turkey either way.

“I never urge any other foreign governments to do things which are not of our concern,” Szijjarto said. — Euronews


January 31, 2023
100 views
HIGHLIGHTS
World
13 hours ago

US ties $2bn UN aid pledge to sweeping reforms

World
13 hours ago

Thailand accuses Cambodia of breaking new ceasefire deal

World
14 hours ago

Three Turkish police officers, six IS militants killed in gunfight