logo
Border-free EU travel brings 'thrilled' ethnic Hungarians closer

Border-free EU travel brings 'thrilled' ethnic Hungarians closer

Yahoo28-01-2025
Visiting Hungary as a teenager, opera singer Katalin Benedekffy used to have to wait up to a whole day at the border with her childhood home, Romania. Now, to her delight, she can cross straightaway.
In the early hours of New Year's Day, she made the crossing unhindered for the first time, after Romania joined Europe's border-free travel zone.
"It's a miracle," said Benedekffy.
"I asked my husband to back up because I wanted to record it," she told AFP. "It's an incredible feeling."
Benedekffy, 47, now lives in Budapest and often travels back and forth to visit relatives in her hometown of Szeklerland in Romania's Transylvania region. She made her first control-free crossing on her return trip to Hungary.
"It's like being in the same country as my loved ones, as there are practically no borders anymore," she said.
For centuries, the region was part of the Austro-Hungarian empire in so-called "Greater Hungary" -- a notion referred to with nostalgia by the current nationalist government in Budapest.
Almost a fifth of Hungary's population has relatives in neighbouring countries, within the historical boundaries of what was Hungary before it was partitioned in the aftermath of World War I, a 2020 survey showed.
Romania and Bulgaria became full members of Europe's so-called Schengen zone from January 1, when land border checks ceased.
That ended years of waiting for the countries after they qualified to join Schengen, with political resistance from certain other EU states having delayed the move.
- 'Trianon trauma' -
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who took credit for the final negotiations on joining Schengen, hailed the expansion as an "important step for national unity" that dismantled barriers "between families".
About one million ethnic Hungarians -- Magyars -- live in Romania, the largest such community outside of Hungary, with other significant ones in Slovakia, Serbia and Ukraine.
Under the Treaty of Trianon, signed in Versailles in 1920 after the dissolution of the defeated Austro-Hungarian empire, Hungary had to surrender two-thirds of its territory to neighbouring states.
Many Hungarians still resent the territorial and population losses, sometimes described as "Trianon trauma".
Since Orban's return to power in 2010, the nationalist leader has regularly irked neighbouring countries by focusing on pre-World War I Hungary's territory.
Orban has continued to woo Magyar communities by opening up an easy path to Hungarian citizenship -- and thus voting rights -- and financing projects such as schools for them.
- 'Imaginary wall' -
Following the fall of communism in 1989 -- years before Orban's rise to power -- one of Hungary's main foreign policy goals was to "make surrounding borders irrelevant, without revising them", Nandor Bardi, an expert on minority research at the Hungarian HUN-REN research centre, told AFP.
Magyars are "relieved it finally happened", he said.
Benedekffy well remembers the "humiliating waits" of up to 24 hours at the border that she had endured since she was a girl.
Although waiting times significantly decreased after Hungary and Romania joined the European Union -- in 2004 and 2007 respectively -- lorry drivers and travellers still had to queue for at least an hour at border crossings, police told AFP.
"We used to do calculations, how to avoid delays at the border," said Zoltan Nagy, 39, a manager at a car manufacturer in Budapest.
He once celebrated Easter with his family in Transylvania two weeks in advance to avoid the crowds.
But now "the journey has become a lot more predictable -- we no longer have to stress about how much time we spend at the border".
In neighbouring countries with Magyar populations, Orban's policies have stirred up fears that he is trying to exert influence on their territory.
Criticising Brussels and courting US President Donald Trump and Russia's Vladimir Putin, the nationalist leader is nowadays "more concerned about geopolitics", however, said analyst Bardi.
The disappearance of border checks holds symbolic value for many Transylvanian Magyars, such as Mihaly Fazakas, a 77-year-old retired textile engineer.
"We are thrilled because we no longer have that imaginary wall dividing us," he told AFP.
"It feels almost as if Transylvania got returned."
ros/anb-kym/rlp
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US immigrant population drops for the first time in 50 years — as Trump seals the border and pushes mass deportations
US immigrant population drops for the first time in 50 years — as Trump seals the border and pushes mass deportations

New York Post

time33 minutes ago

  • New York Post

US immigrant population drops for the first time in 50 years — as Trump seals the border and pushes mass deportations

The number of immigrants in the US has dropped for the first time in 50 years — declining by 1.5 million people in the first six months of 2025 after President Trump kicked off a major crackdown and all but closed the border to illegal crossings. According to the nonpartisan Pew Research Center, 51.9 million immigrants called the US home as of June — down from 53.3 million when Trump was inaugurated for his second term. The Department of Homeland Security said that 1.6 million illegal migrants have voluntarily left the US since Trump came to office — contributing to the massive decline in the immigrant population. 3 The immigrant population in the US dropped by 1.5 million between January and June, according to numbers from Pew Research. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement The proportion of immigrants in the US is still at historic highs — with 15.4% of the population being foreign born, exceeding the levels of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the days of Ellis Island. The US workforce is still 19% immigrants, according to Pew — down from 20% at the start of the year, but a reduction of 750,000 immigrant workers. The figures emerged after six months of Trump administration slowing illegal US border crossings to a trickle, with fewer than 5,000 per month, and zero migrants released into the US. Advertisement The Trump administration has also begun a massive deportation push — with the goal of booting one million illegal migrants per year from the country. DHS said Thursday that ICE and other federal agencies have arrested more than 359,000 illegal migrants — and deported 332,000 — during the first 200 days of the second Trump administration. Additionally, the DHS estimated that 1.6 million migrants have voluntarily left the country in that time. Trump has also taken steps like increasing access restrictions for asylum-seekers at the southern border and stepping up visa requirements for foreign-born students. Advertisement 3 The Trump administration's stepped-up enforcement of US immigration law played a part in the drop. Getty Images The State Department announced this week it had revoked around 6,000 student visas, many because holders had committed crimes like assault or burglary, but around 2-300 were clawed back due to alleged 'support for terrorism.' But the most sweeping efforts by the administration to crack down on foreigners entering the US comes from tightening its grip on illegal immigration, a far cry from the Biden administration during which an estimated 10 million illegal aliens entered the US via the Mexican border. Under Trump, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has been newly empowered under border czar Tom Homan to round up migrants and start deportation proceedings, particularly in Democrat-led sanctuary cities like New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. Advertisement 3 Around 140,000 illegal immigrants have been deported so far under the Trump administration. AFP via Getty Images The agency has been given a mandate to arrest 3,000 illegal migrants per day, which insiders told The Post has been difficult to meet on a consistent basis. However, the agency is currently holding a record 60,000 illegal immigrants at facilities across the country, some awaiting processing for deportation and others choosing to self-deport to expedite the process. The decline in immigration over the last six months aligns with Trump's priorities. The commander-in-chief heralded the America's negative net migration in a Truth Social post earlier this month, sharing a photo of a Border Patrol agent looking through binoculars with the caption 'Negative net migration for the first time in 50 years!' Department of Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem also praised the reduction of the illegal immigrant population, saying in a statement last week that the decline 'is already being felt nationwide, from reduced strain on public services to a resurgence in local job markets.' The US experienced a similar exodus in the 1930s during the Great Depression, when an estimated 400,000 to 1 million Mexican immigrants departed the US, some under programs that encouraged them to return to their country of origin. — Jennie Taer contributed additional reporting

US-EU trade deal: new framework agreement boosts transatlantic economic ties
US-EU trade deal: new framework agreement boosts transatlantic economic ties

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

US-EU trade deal: new framework agreement boosts transatlantic economic ties

Transatlantic trade relations are set for a shakeup, with the United States and European Union announcing details of a trade deal on Thursday. The Framework on an Agreement on Reciprocal, Fair, and Balanced Trade ('Framework Agreement') aims to resolve trade imbalances and benefit both economies through mutual concessions and coordinated economic policies. Under the agreement, the EU will eliminate tariffs on all U.S. industrial goods and provide preferential market access for numerous American agricultural products, including tree nuts, dairy, fruits, vegetables, and meat. In exchange, the U.S. commits to applying a maximum 15% tariff rate on most EU goods, with certain exceptions receiving only Most Favored Nation (MFN) treatment. 'This Framework Agreement represents a concrete demonstration of our commitment to fair, balanced, and mutually beneficial trade and investment,' states the joint announcement from the U.S. and EU. 'It reflects acknowledgment by the European Union of the concerns of the United States and our joint determination to resolve our trade imbalances.' Reactions to the news were mixed across the Atlantic. Velina Tchakarova, a geopolitical analyst, said in an X post, 'U.S.-EU trade deal has been sealed today. U.S. gained offensive market access. The EU settled for defensive ceilings. Europe traded autonomy for stability in Trump's new order of tariffs as a permanent weapon, not a bargaining chip. Strategic autonomy slips further out of reach.' There were some positives for the Europeans. The EU is the only U.S. trade partner worldwide with an all-inclusive tariff ceiling, according to Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, in an X post. On the American side, reactions were positive. U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in an X post, 'The America First Trade Agenda has secured the most important trading partner, creating a major win for American workers, U.S. industries, and our national security. Tariffs should be one of America's favorite words.' A substantial part of the agreement centers on energy and technology provisions, with the EU pledging to procure approximately $750 billion in U.S. liquefied natural gas, oil, and nuclear energy products through 2028, plus an additional $40 billion in American AI chips for computing centers. Beyond tariffs, both sides commit to addressing non-tariff barriers through mutual recognition of automobile standards and enhanced technical cooperation. The framework addresses longstanding U.S. concerns regarding EU environmental regulations, with specific commitments to modify the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and create flexibility in implementing corporate sustainability directives. The agreement also establishes new parameters for digital trade, with the EU confirming it will not adopt network usage fees and both parties agreeing not to impose customs duties on electronic transmissions. European companies are expected to invest an additional $600 billion across strategic U.S. sectors through 2028, while the EU plans to significantly increase military and defense equipment procurement from American suppliers. Both sides view this framework as the first step in an ongoing process to expand trade cooperation, with additional negotiating areas to be addressed in future rounds. The post US-EU trade deal: new framework agreement boosts transatlantic economic ties appeared first on FreightWaves.

Joint EU-US statement confirms lower tariffs on autos, other sectors
Joint EU-US statement confirms lower tariffs on autos, other sectors

E&E News

time3 hours ago

  • E&E News

Joint EU-US statement confirms lower tariffs on autos, other sectors

The United States and the EU on Thursday executed the verbal agreement President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen reached in Scotland late last month, including lowering tariffs on automobiles and other sectors to 15 percent. The White House framed the statement as an important step toward reaching a comprehensive deal with the 27-nation bloc, collectively the United States' largest trading partner. 'These are ambitious things and we expect in the coming weeks … to fully paper over the agreement,' a senior administration official told reporters Wednesday evening ahead of the announcement. Advertisement The joint statement affirms several aspects of the verbal agreement the president unveiled July 27, including a 15 percent tariff rate on most goods — half the 30 percent rate Trump had threatened. That includes critical sectors like autos, following weeks of uncertainty that had frustrated the EU.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store