Orbán prepared to stop shipments for Ukraine passing through Hungary as Russian oil pipeline row escalates – Europe live

7 hours ago 4

Key events

Show key events only

Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature

Morning opening:

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Hungary will use “every means” to force a favourable solution in an escalating row with neighbouring Ukraine over stalled Russian oil supplies to Budapest and Bratislava, prime minister Viktor Orbán this morning.

Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán attend the European Political Community Summit at the Puskás Arena, in Budapest, Hungary in 2024.
Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán attend the European Political Community Summit at the Puskás Arena, in Budapest, Hungary in 2024. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters

His comments come as the neighbouring countries are locked in dispute over the temporary closure of the Druzhba pipeline which pumps Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia, and which Kyiv says was damaged by Russian strikes in January.

In response, Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán blocked the payment of a €90bn EU loan to Ukraine and adoption of the latest round of sanctions against Russia last month.

But in recent weeks, the tensions grew further, with Orbán regularly using disparaging references to Ukraine and Volodymyr Zelenskyy in his domestic campaign ahead of next month’s high-stakes parliamentary election, which could see him out of power after 16 years.

Yesterday, Orbán accused Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy of threatening him after the Ukrainian president told a government meeting in Kyiv:

We hope that one person in the European Union will not block the €90bn and that Ukrainian fighters will receive weapons; otherwise, we will give this person’s address to our guys so they can call him and speak to him in their language.

Orbán said on social media that Zelenskyy’s words were “not about me – he is threatening Hungary.”

Later in the evening, Ukraine’s foreign minister Andrii Sybiha claimed Hungary “took hostage” seven employees of a state-owned Ukrainian bank Oschadbank who were transporting $40m, €35m and 9 kg of gold from Austria to Ukraine via Hungary.

“The reasons are still unknown, as well as their current wellbeing, or the possibility of contacting them,” he said.

Oschadbank confirmed that their vehicle’s GPS indicated it was parked near a law enforcement agency in central Budapest. It demanded the immediate release of its employees and property.

But this morning Orbán went further, telling state radio that Hungary would be prepared to stop all shipments for Ukraine going through its territory.

“The Ukrainians will run out of money sooner than we run out of oil,” he said.

He was also publicly backed by Slovak prime minister Robert Fico, who urged senior EU leaders to “distance themselves from these outrageous blackmailing statements” by Zelenskyy.

Let’s see what comes out of that.

I will also keep an eye on the latest on European evacuation flights from the Middle East and on Cyprus.

It’s Friday, 6 March 2026, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

Read Entire Article
International | Politik|