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Orban Ready to Sue EU Commission Over 'Imposing Foreign Population' on Hungary

© REUTERS / Michael DalderHungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban gives a speech during his visit at the Bavarian state parliament in Munich, Germany October 17, 2016.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban gives a speech during his visit at the Bavarian state parliament in Munich, Germany October 17, 2016. - Sputnik International
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Hungarian PM Viktor Orban, has continued his anti-refugee rhetoric by threatening to sue the EU over compulsory migrant quotas. Orban claims that the decision as to whether refugees should be accepted is an issue for national sovereignty and wants to urgently amend Hungary's constitution, so that they cannot be resettled in the country.

 

The European Commission is attempting to impose mandatory resettlement quotas on Hungary and in response, the country's PM is threatening to sue them. 

In a radio interview, PM Orban said that if the European Commission did not drop the idea of mandatory refugee quotas, then Hungary would have no option but to resist the EU's decision and sue the Commission.

"There will be a serious legal debate on whether a foreign population can be imposed on the people of an EU member state against its will. This will be a big battle, and for this we need the (amended) constitution," Orban said in a recent state radio interview.

He also pointed out that his country will use the results of a recent referendum, in which the majority of the Hungarian people rejected the the desire to resettle refugees, during EU negotiations over quotas.

Migrants board a train after making their way through the countryside and crossing the Hungarian-Croatian border near the village of Zakany in Hungary to continue their trip to north on October 16, 2015 - Sputnik International
EU Unlikely to Sanction Hungary for Amendments to Block EU Migrant Quota

In addition to this, the vice chairman of the Hungarian National Assembly's Committee on Foreign Affairs, Marton Gyongyosi, said the EU is unlikely to impose any kind of punishment on Hungary, following the adoption by the Hungarian Parliament of amendments to the constitution, aimed at blocking the EU migrant relocation scheme. 

Critics say that Hungary's PM is likely to fail in his attempt to prevent the country from taking part in the EU's resettlement program as the voter turnout was so low that the referendum result is seen by many as not legally binding. 

However, 3.3 million voters or more than 98 percent of those who cast ballots, did favor the proposal to reject refugees.

Orban's government spent an estimated US$40 million on the referendum alone.

© REUTERS / Bernadett SzaboHungarian women wearing traditional costume leave a voting booth at a polling station during a referendum on EU migrant quotas in Veresegyhaz, Hungary, October 2, 2016.
Hungarian women wearing traditional costume leave a voting booth at a polling station during a referendum on EU migrant quotas in Veresegyhaz, Hungary, October 2, 2016.  - Sputnik International
Hungarian women wearing traditional costume leave a voting booth at a polling station during a referendum on EU migrant quotas in Veresegyhaz, Hungary, October 2, 2016.

This is not the first time the Hungarian PM has questioned the motives of the European Commission concerning the migrant crisis.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban delivers his address as pictured through a hole on the national flag during the state commemoration ceremony of the 1956 Hungarian revolution and freedom fight against communism and Soviet rule in front of the Parliament building in downtown Budapest, Hungary, Sunday, Oct. 23, 2016 - Sputnik International
Hungarian Revolution 2016: Orban Leads Rebellion Against Brussels-as-Usual

In 2015, Orban sealed the country's southern borders with a razor-wire fence and thousands of army as well as police officers were deployed, to stop the influx of refugees escaping conflict zones in the Middle East and North Africa.

Orban responded to criticism following the decision to build a fence, saying that the country would be overrun by Muslims, which posed a real threat to Hungary's Christian roots.

"That is an important question, because Europe and European culture have Christian roots. Or is it not already and in itself alarming that Europe's Christian culture is barely in a position to uphold Europe's own Christian values?" Orban was quoted as saying.

At such a critical time for Europe, which continues to face a massive influx of migrants as well as the threat of Daesh — also known as ISIL — related terrorism, it appears that Viktor Orban is just one of a number of European politicians, unwilling to cave in and prepared to challenge the EU Commission over migrant quotas.

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