Lavrov, the longtime Kremlin top diplomat, praised Hungary for a “pragmatic course” despite “constant pressure from NATO and the EU.”
He regurgitated the Kremlin’s unsubstantiated grievance that Kyiv has declared war on “the Russian language and culture,” leading to discrimination against Russian minorities in the country. That “forced Ukrainization,” in Lavrov’s telling, should also be of concern to minorities such as Hungarians, Armenians, Belarusians, Bulgarians, Greeks, Poles and Romanians, he said, in a nudge to Budapest.
According to the last official census conducted in Ukraine in 2001, there were about 150,000 Hungarians living in Ukraine, mainly concentrated along the Hungarian-Ukrainian border, but since 2022 that number has shrunk to less than 90,000, according to recent estimates.
Orbán has recently ramped up his anti-Ukrainian campaign — including the vow to block Kyiv’s bid for EU membership — in a bid to unite his disparate voter coalition as he faces increasing pressure from opposition leader Péter Magyar, whose Tisza party has a stable lead in opinion surveys, according to POLITICO’s Poll of Polls.