Szijjarto: Hungary, Moldova agree to allow unimpeded travel
DK asks EC position on travel with certificates
Sandor Ronai told an online press conference that the Orban government had “once again let down Hungarians in connection with the coronavirus”.
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has promised that Hungarians would not suffer any disadvantage if they wanted to travel in EU countries, and that the Chinese and Russian vaccines would not be a problem, Ronai said. In view of the fact that the government is seeking individual deals with certain countries, it is already clear that the Hungarian vaccination certificate would not be valid everywhere, he added.
The main problem is that the vaccination certificates issued by the Orban government fail to show what type of vaccine their holder received, Ronai said.
“The Orbán government, which had political and financial reasons to get eastern vaccines, is intentionally hiding from receiving countries that many Hungarians were inoculated with Eastern vaccines and not Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca or Janssen,” he said.
Many people have been turned back at borders or they had to produce instant coronavirus test results in order to gain entry, resulting in extra costs, he said. He reiterated his party’s demand that the government should make free tests available and called on the government to ensure that “every Hungarian gets the type of vaccination which enables them to use the same rights as all EU citizens, including travel and work”.
Szijjarto: Hungary, Moldova agree to allow unimpeded travel
Hungarian and Moldovan citizens vaccinated against coronavirus can travel into each other’s countries without mandatory quarantines or negative test results from Tuesday, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said on Saturday.
The talks were concluded on Saturday, Szijjarto said in a video posted on Facebook. “We continue talks with other countries on the mutual acceptance of immunity certificates and unimpeded travel,” Szijjarto said.