Hungary's Orban unexpectedly visits China, backs Xi's peace plan
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[July 08, 2024]
By Joe Cash and Anita Komuves
BEIJING/BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban met
Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday to discuss a potential Ukraine
peace deal, paying the unexpected visit to Beijing days after his talks
with Russia's Vladimir Putin angered some European Union leaders.
Orban and Xi met at the Diaoyutai State Guest House in Beijing, Chinese
state media reported, for what Orban described as the third leg of a
"peace mission" that he has undertaken without the backing of the
European Commission or Ukraine.
While Hungary just assumed the EU's rotating presidency this month,
Orban has already met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in
Kyiv and been received by the Kremlin, a trip that drew a strong rebuke
from his allies.
"Peace Mission 3.0.," Orban, a critic of Western military aid to Ukraine
and the EU leader with the warmest relations with Xi and Putin, said on
his official X account as he touched down in Beijing.
China, which has close ties to Russia, has been promoting a six-point
peace plan it issued with Brazil in May, proposing an international
peace conference "at a proper time" and calling for equal participation
by both Ukraine and Russia.
Ukraine is hoping to win broad global backing for its proposals on how
to end the war with Russia before beginning discussions with Putin,
holding a huge international summit last month in Switzerland to which
Moscow was not invited.
But Kyiv's aim of ostracizing Russia is meeting resistance. China sat
out the Swiss meeting and has won backing from Moscow for its own peace
plan. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is expected to visit Russia
later this week, with Ukraine likely to be on the agenda.
"The international community should create conditions for the resumption
of direct dialogue and negotiations between the two sides and provide
assistance," Xi told Orban, according to Chinese state media.
"It is in the interests of all parties to seek a political solution
through an early ceasefire," he added.
Orban said China was "a key power in creating the conditions for peace
in the Russia-Ukraine war", giving that as the reason for his meeting
with Xi just two months after the Chinese leader visited Budapest.
Orban's trip to China comes days ahead of a NATO summit in Washington
D.C. that will address providing further support to Ukraine and which he
is due to attend.
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Chinese President Xi Jinping meets Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor
Orban at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, China July 8,
2024. China Daily via REUTERS
TRADE TENSIONS
Hungary's leader also comes to China fresh off the European
Commission confirming last week that it will impose tariffs of up to
37.6% on imports of electric vehicles made in China.
The central European country has become an important trade and
investment partner for China, in contrast with some other EU nations
seeking to become less dependent on the world's second-largest
economy.
While Beijing threatens to impose retaliatory anti-dumping measures
against European pork imports, Peter Szijjarto, Hungary's foreign
affairs and trade minister, told Hungarian state media the two sides
had negotiated an agreement on relaunching pork and poultry exports
to China.
Chinese companies at the forefront of the electromobility transition
would also continue to make investments in Hungary that would create
about 25,000 jobs, he added.
EU trade policy has turned increasingly protective over concerns
that China's production-focused development model could see it
flooded with cheap goods as Chinese firms look to step up exports
amid weak domestic demand.
China's electric vehicles have become a particular cause for concern
because Brussels claims they benefit from unfair state subsidies, an
allegation Beijing rejects.
While some EU leaders have been quick to say Hungary's EU presidency
does not mean Orban represents the 27-strong bloc, Xi told Orban
that China hoped Hungary would "play an active role in promoting the
healthy and stable development of China-EU relations".
In Germany, Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck said on Monday Orban does
not speak for Europe and that Hungary's politics often do not
represent the core of EU thinking.
(Additional reporting by Boldizsar Gyori in Budapest; Writing by Joe
Cash; Editing by Himani Sarkar, Miral Fahmy and Helen Popper)
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