Hungary told it can't host EU gathering after the latest clash with Putin ally over Ukraine
Hungary has been stripped of the right to host a forthcoming gathering of European Union ministers due to its stance on the war in Ukraine.
Josep Borrell, the EU's foreign policy chief, on Monday said that the next meeting of EU foreign and defense ministers would now take place in Brussels rather than in Hungary, where it would be expected to take place as Budapest currently holds the rotating six-month EU presidency.
"We have to send a signal, even if it is a symbolic signal, that being against the foreign policy of the European Union ... has to have some consequences," Borrell told reporters in Brussels on Monday.
Borrell said he had made the decision to hold the next gathering in Brussels after almost every EU foreign minister meeting on Monday was critical of Hungary's stated position on Kyiv, Russia and the war in Ukraine.
Tensions between the EU and Budapest have grown after Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban undertook a self-styled "peace mission" to Ukraine, Russia and China earlier in July without the EU's backing. Orban, who's seen as an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, has since provoked fury in Brussels by describing EU policy on Ukraine as "pro-war."
The EU's top diplomat Borrell said Monday that a number of EU foreign ministers had expressed their unwillingness to go to Budapest for their next gathering of foreign and defense ministers, which is set to take place in late August.
Borrell said "all member states — with one single exception — are very much critical about this behaviour" from Hungary, adding that he believed it was "appropriate to show this feeling and to call for the next foreign and defence council meetings in Brussels."
He nevertheless told reporters that the move was not a