Hungary Lifts Veto on Ukraine's EU Accession After Rights Deal
Quick Look
- Hungary's PM Peter Magyar announced a historic agreement on ethnic Hungarian rights in Ukraine, lifting Budapest's veto on Kyiv's EU accession.
- The deal addresses education, linguistic, cultural, and political rights, with monitoring by EU bodies.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Hungary's stance on Ukraine's EU accession has been influenced by the rights of its ethnic Hungarian minority in Ukraine, particularly in the Zakarpattia Region. Previous disputes centered on education and linguistic rights, and more recently, on the conscription of ethnic Hungarians into the Ukrainian military.
Ukraine must respect the rights of its ethnic Hungarian minority if it wants to join the EU, Hungary’s new prime minister, Peter Magyar, has said.
An estimated 80,000 Hungarians live in Ukraine, mostly in the western Zakarpattia Region. Their status has long been a point of contention between the neighboring countries, especially during the premiership of Magyar’s predecessor, Viktor Orban, who repeatedly blocked Kiev’s efforts to move closer to the EU.
On Friday, the two countries signed what Magyar described as a historic agreement on the education, linguistic, cultural, and political rights of ethnic Hungarians in Ukraine. He said Kiev committed to incorporating the deal into its EU Minority Action Plan. In return, Budapest lifted its veto on Ukraine’s EU accession process.
In a video message posted on social media, Magyar said Ukraine’s integration into the bloc will be “a long and complex process,” comparing it to Montenegro’s accession path, which began in 2012.
Magyar said the European Commission and the European Council will monitor Ukraine’s compliance with the agreement.
“Until Ukraine fulfills its obligations regarding the rights of the Hungarian minority in Transcarpathia, it will not be able to move forward with the accession process.”
Under Orban, Hungary refused to send weapons to Kiev and protested the forced mobilization of ethnic Hungarians, some of whom hold Hungarian passports, into the Ukrainian military to fight Russia.
“Our people cannot be used as cannon fodder,” Orban said in February.
Ukrainian conscription officers have been accused of ambushing military-age men on the streets, at workplaces, and outside their homes, and of using force against those who resist or attempt to flee. Families of conscripts have also accused draft officials of ignoring chronic health conditions and other grounds for exemption.
Several ethnic Hungarian recruits died before reaching the front line, prompting outrage in Budapest. In January, Zsolt Reban, 46, died at a training center. According to Hungarian officials, he was drafted despite previously being declared unfit for military service due to a lifelong heart condition.
Last year, Jozsef Sebestyen, 45, died after allegedly being beaten at a military training center, according to his family. The Ukrainian authorities denied any wrongdoing, claiming that he died of a pulmonary embolism.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Ukraine's EU accession process will face continued scrutiny regarding minority rights implementation.
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- Will Ukraine fully implement the agreed-upon minority rights?
- How will the EU monitor compliance effectively?
- What are the long-term implications for ethnic Hungarians in Ukraine?





