Hungary 'in full armour' before 2nd wave, PM says
Orbán: The lives of parents and grandparents are primarily in young people’s hands
Orbán noted the government’s experiences gained during the first wave of the pandemic, adding that some 1.7-1.8 million people had returned the government’s “National Consultation” questionnaires concerning preventive measures. “The success of prevention now depends on whether residents support the measures,” he said, but added that the large number of respondents in the survey “lends great strength to the country and to the government”.
According to the prime minister, the government must now focus on saving lives, with special regard to the elderly, ensuring the necessary conditions for schools and boosting the economy. Concerning the latter, he said that “if we need to halt the economy again, it will create a very difficult situation for us all”.
In his interview, Orbán called on young people to observe preventive measures because “the lives of parents and grandparents are primarily in their hands”.
Hungary’s health care system “completed an exercise in spring” and “we now know exactly what we should do in a worst case scenario”, Orbán said and suggested that the country has a sufficient number of ventilators, but added that delays could be expected in the production of domestically produced equipment. Concerning testing, he said that Hungary has used the World Health Organisation’s protocol and would continue to follow international standards.
Orbán said that “Hungary has had the most successful prevention in Europe” and warned that possible changes should not result in a worse situation than before. The Hungarian government “measures success in the number of lives” and “we won the first battle”, the prime minister said. Sweden, a country with a population similar in size, lost ten times as many patients as Hungary, he argued.
On the subject of the European Union’s warning Hungary against “discriminating” some countries in its recent travel restrictions, Orbán said that “bureaucrats in Brussels must understand that V4 countries have developed a deep cooperation concerning the epidemic”, adding that “Hungary is rather safe due to preventive measures in the other three Visegrad countries”.
Defending recent entry restrictions, the prime minister said that “the virus is inside Hungary, its spread must be slowed down in the country and prevent further imports”. He added that a government meeting later in the day would “further refine details to achieve the greatest possible freedom while observing all important restrictions”. Concerning foreign criticism of the measures, he said that “they can say what they want…but, in a couple of days, they’re going to do the same thing we’re doing”, and argued that the pandemic cannot be reined in without restrictions at the border.
Referring to the start of school, the prime minister said that the government had imposed a lockdown on schools during the first wave because “we were facing an unknown adversary”, but added that similar, general restrictions were not needed now because “the virus is not present everywhere”. Schools in which the infection may emerge will send children home and switch to digital education, but “not in a small village where not a single coronavirus-infected child has ever been seen”.
On another subject, Orbán said he was surprised at the human resources minister’s arranging a one-off payment of 500,000 forints (EUR 1,400) to teachers in neglected areas because Kasler had made the decision in his own right. The prime minister added, however, that “it was a good decision”, and noted that “doctors and teachers in villages face different challenges than their colleagues in Budapest’s inner city”.
Concerning the Bled Strategic Forum he attended earlier this week, Orbán said that current, global changes will determine “where the West, Europe, and Central Europe has a place in the world” but added that in view of the Polish economy’s achievement he expected Poland to become “the new Germany of Europe” in ten years.