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China and 'good friend' Hungary shore up policing and security ties

China and Hungary have pledged to deepen collaboration and cooperation in policing and security, signing a series of agreements on improving cooperation in the areas.

In a meeting with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in Budapest on Friday, Chinese Public Security Minister Wang Xiaohong said the two countries should also "deepen mutual political trust ... and strengthen communication and collaboration in international and regional affairs".

According to a Chinese statement on Sunday, Wang told Orban that Hungary was "a good friend and companion who has stood the test of time".

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"It is hoped that the two sides will deepen cooperation in areas such as counter-terrorism, combating transnational crime, the security of Belt and Road [Initiative projects] and law enforcement capacity-building, and turn law enforcement and security cooperation into a new highlight of bilateral relations," Wang said while in the Hungarian capital for a bilateral law enforcement conference.

The Budapest Times quoted Bertalan Havasi, the prime minister's press chief, as saying Orban told Wang that ties between Hungary and China were based on respect, "an otherwise dwindling commodity in international diplomacy".

The two sides also stressed the importance of security and stability as a basis for the development of economic and trade ties, Havasi said.

Hungary has been a Nato member since 1999 and a European Union member since 2004, but has been pursuing closer ties with China.

The central European nation was the first in the European Union to sign a belt and road memorandum with Beijing, which funded a high-speed railway between the Hungarian and Serbian capitals.

Orban, a five-term prime minister who first governed the country in 1998, was also the only leader of an EU member state to attend October's belt and road forum in Beijing, hosted by Chinese President Xi Jinping. Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke at the event.

Since 2020, China has emerged as the biggest investor in Hungary.

Hungary is home to Huawei Technologies' largest logistics and manufacturing base outside China despite European Commission warnings that the Chinese telecom giant poses a risk to EU security.

It will soon host Chinese carmaker BYD's first European factory, and last year, China's battery-maker CATL, announced that it would invest €7.3 billion (US$7.6 billion) to build a 100 GWh battery plant in Debrecen, Hungary's second-biggest city.

During his visit in Budapest, Wang also held talks with Hungarian Interior Minister Sandor Pinter, who said bilateral cooperation was made possible "by the guarantee of security and stability, which are essential for further developing comprehensive strategic cooperation".

On his Facebook page, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said Chinese investment was "the key to the long-term growth" of the Hungarian economy.

"Europe faced the reality, the Chinese economy simply exceeded that of Europeans. It's time to come to common sense and move to cooperation instead of the politics of isolation," Szijjarto wrote on Friday, while posting photos of his meeting with Chinese vice foreign minister Ma Zhaoxu.

"We benefited a lot from our policy based on rational, mutual respect, because modern Chinese investments are the key to the long-term growth of the Hungarian economy."

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP's Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2024 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Copyright (c) 2024. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.