Budapest convinced Brussels not to target the Russian Orthodox Church, Peter Szijjarto has said
Hungary agreed not to veto the EU’s latest package of sanctions on Russia after pressuring the bloc to abandon “crazy ideas” like blacklisting the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto has said.
EU foreign ministers formally adopted the bloc’s 15th package of economic penalties on Russia at a meeting in Brussels on Monday. The latest tranche of sanctions blacklists 54 people and 30 entities, including Russian military commanders, oil tankers allegedly connected to Russia, Russian defense firms, and “various Chinese actors” accused of supplying electronic components with military uses to Russia.
Beijing has long maintained that it does not supply any military goods or components to Moscow.
The EU also sanctioned the defense minister and deputy chief of the general staff of North Korea, over claims that North Korean troops are training in Russia and taking part in the conflict with Ukraine. Moscow and Pyongyang have neither confirmed nor denied these allegations. However, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said that it is up to both nations to decide how to fulfil their commitments under a recently signed defense treaty.
At a press conference on Monday afternoon, Szijjarto said that he voted for the sanctions, but only after the EU agreed to extend an exemption allowing Hungarian energy giant MOL to continue purchasing Russian crude oil. Szijjarto added that he also convinced officials in Brussels to “weed out… crazy ideas” like sanctioning Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church, Russia’s UN envoy, the Russian Olympic Committee, and “two Russian Premier League football teams.”
“We vetoed this,” he told reporters. “We simply said we will not support such sanctions.”
Patriarch Kirill has already been sanctioned by the UK for what the British Foreign Office called his “prominent support of Russian military aggression in Ukraine.” Several EU member states, including Lithuania, Estonia, and the Czech Republic, have also blacklisted the Orthodox leader.
”They’ve made the Patriarch persona non grata in Europe. Why? It’s because the Patriarch is spiritually leading the nation, leading the church that has taken a different civilizational path of development,” Kirill said during a service in Moscow earlier this year.
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Back in Brussels, Hungary and Slovakia also blocked proposed sanctions against top Georgian officials. The sanctions were pushed by new EU diplomatic chief Kaja Kallas, after Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze froze EU accession talks over what he termed the bloc’s “constant blackmail and manipulation” of Georgian internal politics.
The EU’s previous package of sanctions on Russia was adopted in June. Each package can only be adopted after a unanimous vote. Moscow has long criticized the measures targeting its economy and trade, while many experts in both Russia and the West have said that unilateral sanctions do more harm to the countries that impose them than to Russia itself.