Hungarian leader Orbán urges European Union to lift Russian energy sanctions

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has formally requested the European Union immediately suspend all sanctions imposed on Russian fossil fuels, citing dramatic energy price increases triggered by ongoing Middle East hostilities. In a social media address on Monday, the Kremlin-aligned leader revealed he had dispatched correspondence to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen urging comprehensive policy reconsideration.

The escalating Iran conflict, now entering its second week, has disrupted critical oil and gas transportation routes through the Persian Gulf, generating substantial price volatility across global markets. Orbán convened an emergency governmental session to develop strategies for mitigating gasoline and diesel cost inflation within Hungary.

This stance aligns with Hungary’s consistent opposition to EU initiatives reducing Russian energy dependence since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Alongside Slovakia, Hungary has preserved and expanded Russian hydrocarbon imports despite continental sanctions. Both nations maintain temporary exemptions from EU prohibitions on Russian oil, historically receiving supplies via the Druzhba pipeline traversing Ukraine.

However, Druzhba transmissions ceased abruptly on January 27 amid escalating Budapest-Kyiv tensions. Ukrainian authorities attribute the interruption to Russian drone strikes damaging pipeline infrastructure, while Orbán alleges deliberate obstruction by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s administration. In retaliation, Hungary has vetoed proposed EU sanctions against Russia and blocked a pivotal €90 billion EU financial assistance package destined for Ukraine.

With elections approaching in April, Orbán’s government has intensified anti-Ukraine rhetoric, accusing Zelenskyy of engineering energy shortages to influence Hungarian electoral outcomes. Tensions further escalated Thursday when Hungarian authorities detained seven Ukrainian state bank employees and confiscated two armored vehicles transporting substantial cash and gold reserves over alleged money laundering activities. Ukraine maintains the transfers constituted routine interbank operations and denies all financial misconduct allegations.