The head of the Hungarian government admitted that his words may be ambiguous, but he meant cultural, not differences.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban says that when he talks about the need to prevent racial mixing, he has in mind the cultural, not the biological, aspect. He said this in a briefing with his Austrian counterpart Karl Negammer in Vienna on Thursday, July 28, Telex reports.
“We are in full agreement on the issue of anti-Semitism and racism. What the Austrian Chancellor thinks about it, I think too,” Orban said at a joint press conference.
Explaining his words that Hungarians should not be of “mixed race”, he said that he was only against migration.
“I don’t want Hungary to become an immigration country, and I don’t want Hungary to have more migration. I’ve always held this view and I continue to hold it, it has no biological basis. For us, it’s not a race issue. It is a matter of culture. Speaking, our civilization must be preserved as it is now,” said Orban.
He also admits that his words can be vague.
“It happens that sometimes I express myself ambiguously. This is a civilized position. We are proud of what Hungary has achieved in the fight against racism,” he added, stressing again that it is not about racism, but about cultural differences.
It was previously reported that Orban caused a scandal by speaking out against “race mixing.” He said that European races should not mix with non-European races, which caused a wave of criticism.
Also this year, Orban delivered an apocalyptic speech in which he predicted the decline of the West and predicted “a decade of danger, uncertainty and war.” He also called for a new EU strategy for Russia’s war in Ukraine, saying sanctions have failed and Ukraine will never win.
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Source: korrespondent

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.