sexta-feira, 24 de abril de 2026

“NO BLACKMAIL!” Magyar SLAMS Ukraine Over Oil Pipeline | ET Now | Latest News | Breaking News

 

Following the historic April 12, 2026, parliamentary elections, Hungary's Prime Minister-elect Péter Magyar has taken a firm stance regarding the Druzhba oil pipeline dispute, declaring that Hungary "won't accept blackmail" from Ukraine.

 


‘We Won't Accept Blackmail’, Hungary PM Elect Magyar Slams Ukraine Over Druzhba Oil Pipeline

Following the historic April 12, 2026, parliamentary elections, Hungary's Prime Minister-elect Péter Magyar has taken a firm stance regarding the Druzhba oil pipeline dispute, declaring that Hungary "won't accept blackmail" from Ukraine.

 

While Magyar’s landslide victory ended Viktor Orbán’s 16-year rule and signaled a more pro-EU shift, the transition has been marked by immediate pressure to resolve a months-long energy crisis.

 

Key Developments in the Pipeline Dispute

The "Blackmail" Stance: Despite his generally constructive tone toward Kyiv, Magyar echoed some of his predecessor's concerns regarding energy security. He emphasized that the flow of Russian crude via the Druzhba pipeline is vital for Hungary's economy and that using transit as a political lever is unacceptable.

Pipeline Restart & Resolution: On April 21, 2026, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that repairs to the pipeline were complete. By April 23, crude flows to Hungary and Slovakia had officially resumed, effectively ending the standoff.

Lifting the Veto: Following the resumption of oil flows, Hungary dropped its longstanding opposition to a €90 billion EU aid package for Ukraine and the 20th package of sanctions against Russia.

 

Context of the 2026 Election

Péter Magyar’s Tisza party secured a supermajority (roughly two-thirds of seats) by campaigning on anti-corruption and domestic reform. While international leaders like Barack Obama and Volodymyr Zelenskyy hailed the result as a victory for democracy, Magyar has maintained a nuanced approach to Ukraine, supporting its sovereignty while remaining skeptical of fast-tracking its EU accession due to economic impacts on Hungarian farmers.

 

Magyar is expected to be formally proposed as Prime Minister when the new National Assembly convenes on May 9, 2026.

‘We Won't Accept Blackmail’, Hungary PM Elect Magyar Slams Ukraine Over Druzhba Oil Pipeline

Hungary’s Peter Magyar Asks Ukraine to Reopen Druzhba Pipeline ‘As Soon As Possible’ | APT Clips

 

BREAKING NEWS LIVE | 'Russia declares... World war 3 has begun' |West on High Alert |Times Now World

 

Following a celebratory evening in Cyprus where they finalized a long-delayed €90 billion ($106 billion) loan for Ukraine, European Union leaders now face the "morning after" reality of implementing the massive package amid lingering geopolitical tensions.

 


After toasting €90B loan, EU leaders face up to the morning after

Following a celebratory evening in Cyprus where they finalized a long-delayed €90 billion ($106 billion) loan for Ukraine, European Union leaders now face the "morning after" reality of implementing the massive package amid lingering geopolitical tensions.

 

The deal, formally approved on April 23, 2026, was unblocked only after a significant political shift in Hungary and the resolution of a months-long dispute over Russian oil flows.

 

The Deal and Its Breakthrough

The Funding: The package provides vital financial and military support for the 2026–2027 period. It is split into €30 billion for macroeconomic budget support and €60 billion for defense industrial capacity and military procurement.

The Turning Point: The primary obstacle was a veto from Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, who demanded the restart of the Druzhba oil pipeline following repairs. The pipeline resumed operations on April 22, 2026. Additionally, Orbán's recent electoral defeat to Péter Magyar signaled a reset in Budapest’s relationship with Brussels.

Repayment Terms: The loan is interest-free for Ukraine and is designed to be repaid using future Russian war reparations. If those are not forthcoming, frozen Russian assets may be used as a fallback.

 

The "Morning After" Challenges

Despite the breakthrough, leaders at the informal summit in Ayia Napa, Cyprus, are now confronting immediate post-celebration hurdles:

Disbursement Timeline: While President Zelenskyy is pushing for funds to arrive by May or June 2026, the EU Commission is working toward a broader second-quarter rollout.

The 20th Sanctions Package: Alongside the loan, the EU adopted its 20th round of sanctions against Russia, targeting its energy and banking sectors and cracking down on the "shadow fleet" used to bypass price caps.

Membership & Security: Leaders are shifting focus to the next complex stages of Ukraine’s potential EU membership and debates over the bloc’s "mutual assistance clause" for geopolitical security.

 

António Costa, President of the European Council, characterized the resolution as a victory for EU unity, stating, "Promised, delivered, implemented".

After toasting €90B loan, EU leaders face up to the morning after

 



After toasting €90B loan, EU leaders face up to the morning after

 

At the summit in Cypriot party town Ayia Napa, the comedown came quickly.

 

By Sebastian Starcevic, Nektaria Stamouli and Jacopo Barigazzi

https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-leaders-summit-toasting-ukraine-loan-morning-after-challenges-defense-budget-iran/

 

AYIA NAPA, Cyprus ― The afternoon began with the EU finally sealing its €90 billion loan to Ukraine. The evening ended with leaders confronting the sheer scale of everything else they have to do.

 

Among other things: Get Kyiv into the EU, beef up the bloc’s mutual defense clause, shield themselves from the economic fallout of the war in Iran and sort out their collective €1.8 trillion budget for another seven years.

 

Sounds easy, right?

 

As European heads of state and government dined together on Thursday in the Cypriot resort of Ayia Napa, on the first day of a two-day gathering largely focused on global politics, any sense of triumph ebbed as they confronted the many challenges and crises on their plates. While they had the luxury of not needing to put their names to a joint statement that evening, their conversation ― over lamb and ravioli ― once again exposed how hard they find it to agree on the way forward.

 

The good news had come earlier when, after months of delay ― mainly down to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s intransigence ― his country and Slovakia dropped their vetoes on the funds for Ukraine first agreed in December. The EU also approved its 20th round of sanctions on Russia.

 

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the Ukrainian president who joined the EU talks, seemed jollier than he had been in months, one diplomat present for some of the discussion in Cyprus said.

 

Not ‘realistic’

But the celebration will be short-lived. The next item on the EU’s agenda is whether, how and when to get his war-torn nation into its club. It is a likely component of any peace deal with Russia and, while the path to EU membership looks a little more feasible now Orbán is on his way out after a brutal election defeat, it is nothing like straightforward.

 

The turquoise waters that provided the stunning backdrop to the summit could not disguise the EU’s fractures. While Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal told reporters he favored “accelerating” Ukraine’s membership, Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković all but scoffed at the idea of Kyiv joining anytime soon.

 

“I don’t think it’s realistic that it’ll happen on the first of January ’27,” he said. Croatia, which became the latest member of the bloc in 2013, “was relatively fast” to do so and it still took “six years to negotiate.”

 

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That sounded different again from the approach French President Emmanuel Macron set out. It was “important to give a precise timeline to Ukraine and Moldova,” he said.

 

For years, if there has been any EU unity at all, it has been in fighting Orbán. With him gone ― and after he skipped what would have been his final summit ― even the illusion of that common front has vanished.

 

“Leaders against Ukraine’s EU accession can no longer hide behind Orbán’s stance,” said one EU official closely involved in the talks. Like others in this article, the were granted anonymity to discuss Thursday’s confidential discussions.

 

Operational plan

On defense, too, leaders are butting heads, but tried not to let it show.

 

With the war in the Middle East still unresolved, Nikos Christodoulides, the president of Cyprus, which is not a NATO member and was struck by Shahed drones in the early days of the Iran conflict, sought to steer the conversation toward the bloc’s security.

 

For European countries outside the transatlantic alliance, or those unnerved by Donald Trump’s questioning of it, the EU’s barely used Article 42.7 is attractive. In case of armed aggression against an EU country, it requires other governments to come to its aid.

 

“We need to have an operational plan,” said Christodoulides. The EU needs to work out “what is going to happen in case a member state decides to trigger the specific article.”

 

Christodoulides wanted to use the meeting to present the other EU leaders with a roadmap for how 42.7 could become operational, a senior Cypriot official told POLITICO ahead of the talks.

 

“It could be something like the activation of the EU civil protection mechanism, which allows any country hit by a disaster to request emergency assistance,” the official said.

 

“It’s not going to be up and running after this summit,” the official added, “but the preparation should start.”

 

But the discussion among leaders was mainly about geopolitics and energy prices in the end, three diplomats said. The article 42.7 discussion barely got off the ground and “was mentioned as part of the wider discussion” by Christodoulides, a fourth diplomat said.

 

Not Europe’s war

In a sign of just how high the stakes are for the EU, Christodoulides argued there cannot be peace in the Middle East without Europe.

 

“We cannot reach de-escalation in Iran without the active participation of the European Union,” he said.

 

Yet many European leaders are still loath to get meaningfully involved in the conflict, with the prevailing feeling in Brussels and other capitals that it is simply not Europe’s war, and discussion centering on little more than moving around warships already stationed in the region.

 

Earlier on Thursday, Trump said he had ordered the U.S. Navy to “shoot and kill” with “no hesitation” boats laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz. European leaders skirted the subject.

 

For them, Thursday’s dinner was more about setting the course for the next few months.

 

Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever said that while things may become somewhat smoother without the pugnacious Orbán, “there are other countries in Europe with leaders who do not always go along with” the European consensus.

 

De Wever — who burnished his own credentials as an obstructionist when he refused to allow the EU to funnel frozen Russian assets from a Brussels-based financial depository to Ukraine last year over fears Moscow would retaliate against Belgium — said it was “slightly overestimated” how much smoother European summits will be without Orbán at the table.

 

At its halfway stage, and — for now — free from the burden of having to put their names to any firm commitments, leaders could avoid really putting that to the test. But they’ll soon have to.

 

Gabriel Gavin and Giorgio Leali also contributed to this article.