END
OF EU? Uprising continues as top Hungary minister says 'we want OUT
of European Union'
THE
Hungarian Prime Minister's right hand man has said he does not want
to remain in the European Union (EU) as it fails to protect European
values.
30
June, 2016
Janos
Lazar's shock revelation on Thursday afternoon came as a growing
number of EU members have joined a queue to back leaving the bloc
after Britons voted to leave last week.
The
Minister for the Prime Minister's office, said: "I couldn't vote
whole-heartedly for Hungary to stay in the EU.
"Europe
does not equal the EU. The EU is not able to protect the rights and
values of Europe.
He
said it was his own opinion, and not the government's.
Mr
Lazar voted for Hungary to join the EU 12 years ago, but said he has
been very disappointed ever since.
Mr
Lazar added: "The Hungarian government is not planning on
holding a referendum on leaving the EU."
Hungary,
which joined the EU in 2004, has become part of a core group of
rebels, including Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, who
threatened today to draw up their own plans for a less centralised
EU.
Poland,
which also joined in 2004, is leading the rebellion by nine former
communist countries after accusing the old guard - Belgium, France,
Italy, Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands - of monopolising EU
discussions after holding private talks in Berlin over the weekend.
Last
week's referendum alarmed governments in the former communist eastern
region of the EU who had seen London as their main eurosceptic ally
in efforts to reduce centralised control from Brussels.
It
is thought the UK's exit from the EU will further isolate central and
eastern European member states in the 28-member bloc.
Mr
Lazar's views came the day after Mr Orban made an angry speech in
which he hit out at Brussels chiefs for losing sight of what the bloc
stands for.
He
said: "Those 27 countries who remain the part of the EU should
practice self-criticism.
"If
we want to restore the democratic nature of the EU, we should return
to the thought that the base of the European Union is its countries
and not its institutions. The European Union is not in Brussels, but
in the 27, or - for the time being - in its 28 European capitals,
that has got a co-operation centre in Brussels.
"We
should divide the question of the EU membership from the question of
migration. It is possible to create European migration politics, in
harmony with the Hungarian national interest."
Mr
Orban also said the EU's failure to manage the migrant crisis was to
blame for Britain voting to leave the EU and warned further
referendums could follow.
He
added: "The important question is what lessons to draw from what
happened, for us Europeans who are still members of the European
Union and want to stay in.
"If
the EU cannot solve the migration situation then such challenges as
we saw in the case of the United Kingdom will increase."
Mr
Orban's ruling Fidesz party will be holding a referendum in September
or October on whether Hungary should reject any future mandatory
quotas from Brussels to resettle migrants arriving en masse from
countries such as Syria.
Hungary,
which built a fence on its southern border to keep out migrants, has
repeatedly accused the EU of weakness in the face of the crisis,
calling for tough policies like fortified borders and strict
immigration procedures.
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