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Hungary's Orban calls for EU-Russia reset
by Staff Writers
Budapest (AFP) Jan 31, 2014


The European Union must reset its ties with Russia, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said Friday, fresh from agreeing a major nuclear deal with Moscow.

"The EU has to rebuild its ties with Russia in a pragmatic manner, because the EU needs energy for its sustainable economic development," the right-wing Orban told a conference of central bankers in Budapest.

"As you know I am an old anti-communist, but if Europe fails to do its utmost to secure Russian energy, I am not sure how it is going to supply its economy," said Orban, 50, who is running for re-election in EU member Hungary on April 6.

Orban, who as a youth activist made a famous speech in 1989 before the fall of communism that year and who has warned against too much influence from Moscow since, this month signed a big nuclear deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Under the accord, agreed without a formal bidding process, Moscow will build two new nuclear reactors at Hungary's sole atomic power plant at Paks -- and will loan Hungary up to 10 billion euros ($13.7 billion) to pay for it.

Putin has long been accused of using the dependence of former communist countries in eastern Europe on Russian oil and gas as a political tool -- not least in Ukraine, currently in major political turmoil -- which has frayed ties with Brussels.

Orban also said that nuclear power was key to solving Europe's energy problems.

"Europe will never succeed if it cannot supply energy at a competitive price, and to do that, the role of nuclear energy needs to be reconsidered," he said.

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Japan revises guidelines for teaching Senkaku ownership
Tokyo (UPI) Jan 29, 2013
Japan's education ministry has revised guidelines for teaching high school students the disputed Senkaku Islands and the smaller Takeshima islets are "integral parts of Japanese territory." Kyodo news agency reported Education Minister Hakubun Shimomura said it is "natural for the state to teach properly about [Japanese] territory." The move was guaranteed to be condemned by main ... read more


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