Hungary accuses Ukraine of blocking delegation from visiting vital oil pipeline

Ukraine is refusing to resume oil supplies via the Druzhba pipeline for purely political reasons despite the infrastructure being fully functional, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said on Tuesday. He added that Kiev has declined a proposed trilateral meeting with Hungary and Slovakia to discuss the issue.
The Ukrainian authorities are preventing vital Russian oil from reaching Hungary and Slovakia via the Druzhba pipeline, which runs through Ukraine, claiming it was damaged by Russian strikes – allegations Moscow rejects. Budapest and Bratislava have accused Kiev of blackmail and also say Brussels has sided with Ukraine instead of backing the two EU member states.
“It has become really obvious that there is no technical or physical reason for the oil supply not to be restarted to Hungary through the Druzhba pipeline,” Szijjarto said at a press conference in Brussels, accusing Kiev of making “a pure political decision.”
The minister added that a trilateral meeting with the Ukrainian Minister of Energy in Brussels initiated by Budapest and Bratislava was “cancelled again by the Ukrainians.” He highlighted that Kiev has rejected all the initiatives taken by Hungary, Slovakia and even by the EU to allow a site visit to see the actual state of the pipeline.
Szijjarto reiterated that a delegation from the Hungarian Energy Ministry spent more than three days in Ukraine last week, but all requests for meetings with Ukrainian energy officials were rejected by Kiev.
“So, you know, I can’t tell you anything, but if a country keeps us under an oil blockade, then that given country cannot expect us to support any decisions here in Brussels in favor of them,” the minister said. “That’s the case.”
In response to Kiev halting supplies through the Soviet-built pipeline, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban vetoed a new round of EU sanctions against Russia and blocked the €90 billion ($105 billion) loan package. On Monday, Szijjarto confirmed that Budapest would continue to oppose the bailout for Ukraine until Kiev resumes oil supplies.
Hungary, a longstanding opponent of Ukraine’s EU membership bid, has consistently refused to send weapons to Kiev or approve EU military aid, calling instead for a diplomatic solution to the conflict.










