During the course of her official visit to Budapest, France’s Minister for European Affairs Nathalie Loiseau held talks with Minster of Justice László Trócsányi on 13 October 2017.
Hungary’s Minister of Justice has announced that “The Government has submitted its amendment to the Act on Higher Education. Despite increasing – but legally unfounded –pressure, the Government maintains its firm belief that Hungarian laws are binding on everyone, even the American Central European University”.
Krisztián Kecsmár, the Ministry of Justice’s State Secretary for Cooperation in European and International Justice Affairs opened the 43th SOLVIT workshop on 5 October 2017, which was hosted in Budapest.
“Brussels is viewing the European Court of Justice’s recent ruling against Hungary as a green light for speeding up and automating the rapid admittance of migrants into the continent”, the Ministry of Justice’s Parliamentary State Secretary and Deputy Justice Minister, Pál Völner said in an interview published in Hungarian daily Magyar Hírlap on 2 October 2017.
According to the Ministry of Justice’s Parliamentary State Secretary, Brussels is progressing according to the “Soros Plan”, despite the fact that the dispute concerning the mandatory resettlement quotas included in the billionaire’s vision “will soon become redundant” since the resolution’s scope of effect will expire on Tuesday.
“Billionaire speculator George Soros first presented his plan, according to which the European Union must accept one million immigrants every year and distribute them among its member states using a permanent, mandatory mechanism, in July of 2015 in the Financial Times”, Deputy Justice Minister Pál Völner said.
The German conservative newspaper Die Welt published an interview with Justice Minister László Trócsányi on its news portal on Wednesday under the title It is not particularly wise to force something upon Central-Europe in connection with the quota lawsuit.
“Hungary welcomes the ruling by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in which the body accepted Hungary’s appeal with relation to the case concerning two Bangladeshi asylum-seekers, who according to the Court’s ruling of first instance were held unlawfully in the autumn of 2015 before being sent back to Serbia”, Deputy Justice Minister Pál Völner said in a telephone statement to Hungarian news agency MTI on Wednesday.
The European Court of Human Rights accepted the appeal of the Hungarian Government, and in consequence, the Grand Chamber may decide on the case of the two Bangladeshi asylum-seekers who have since disappeared from the sight of the Hungarian authorities.
“Hungary respects the ruling by the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in the quota case”, the Ministry of Justice’s Minister of State for European and International Judicial Cooperation stated before the National Assembly’s European Affairs Committee on 18 September 2017.