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Hungary's open path to access blocked funds
Croatia🏛️ PoliticsCenter4 hr. ago

Hungary's open path to access blocked funds

The article reports that ministers of finance from EU member states have approved Hungary's new national recovery and resilience plan, opening the possibility for Hungary to access previously blocked funds totaling 10 billion euros. The funds were initially blocked due to serious and systemic violations of the rule of law during the tenure of former Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. The new Hungarian government, led by Prime Minister Péter Márton, submitted a revised proposal for the national recovery and resilience plan, which was today approved. Hungary is entitled to 10 billion euros from the Recovery and Resilience Mechanism, consisting of approximately 6.5 billion euros in unconditional grants and around 3.5 billion euros in favorable loans. The European Council highlights that the revised Hungarian plan will protect the Union’s financial interests, strengthen Hungary’s anti-corruption framework, increase transparency of public resources and procurement, and improve the inclusion of stakeholders and social partners in the legislative process. The payment from the Recovery and Resilience Mechanism is based on achieving set objectives, meaning the Commission pays out sumsto

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3 reports

N1 Hrvatska logoN1 HrvatskaIndependentCenter4 hr. ago
Hungary's open path to access blocked funds

The European Union has approved Hungary's new national recovery and resilience plan, allowing access to previously blocked funds totaling €10 billion. The funds include €6.5 billion in irreversible grants and €3.5 billion in loans. The approval comes after Hungary submitted a revised plan under Prime Minister Péter Márton, addressing concerns raised by the EU over past violations of rule of law during Viktor Orbán’s tenure. The EU Council emphasized that the plan aims to protect Union financial interests, strengthen anti-corruption frameworks, increase transparency in public resources and procurement, and improve stakeholder inclusion in legislative processes. The plan includes measures to reinforce judicial independence and the rule of law in Hungary. Hungary now has limited time to complete reforms and meet all targets by August 31, submit final payment requests by September 30, and receive payments by December 31.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the EU's approval of Hungary's revised recovery plan in a neutral tone, outlining the conditions and requirements for accessing the funds. While the content relates to politically sensitive issues such as rule of law and corruption, the framing remains objective, citing official

Index.hr logoIndex.hrIndependentCenter4 hr. ago
Opening Hungary's way to previously blocked billions of euros from the EU

The European Union has approved Hungary's new national recovery and resilience plan, allowing access to previously blocked funds totaling 10 billion euros. The funds were initially frozen due to serious and systematic violations of the rule of law under former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. The new Hungarian government, led by Prime Minister Péter Márton, submitted a revised plan which was accepted today. Of the 10 billion euros, 6.5 billion are irreversible grants while 3.5 billion are favorable loans. The approval comes with conditions that require Hungary to meet specific reforms and targets, including strengthening judicial independence and the rule of law. Hungary now has limited time to complete these reforms and submit final requests for disbursement by October 30th, with payments expected by December 31st.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the approval of Hungary's recovery plan in a neutral tone, focusing on the procedural aspects and conditions set by the EU. While the topic involves political issues related to governance and EU relations, the framing does not show clear ideological leaning. It reports on the EU

HRT (Hrvatska radiotelevizija) logoHRT (Hrvatska radiotelevizija)State / PublicCenter4 hr. ago
Hungary's open path to access blocked funds

The article reports that ministers of finance from EU member states have approved Hungary's new national recovery and resilience plan, opening the possibility for Hungary to access previously blocked funds totaling 10 billion euros. The funds were initially blocked due to serious and systemic violations of the rule of law during the tenure of former Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. The new Hungarian government, led by Prime Minister Péter Márton, submitted a revised proposal for the national recovery and resilience plan, which was today approved. Hungary is entitled to 10 billion euros from the Recovery and Resilience Mechanism, consisting of approximately 6.5 billion euros in unconditional grants and around 3.5 billion euros in favorable loans. The European Council highlights that the revised Hungarian plan will protect the Union’s financial interests, strengthen Hungary’s anti-corruption framework, increase transparency of public resources and procurement, and improve the inclusion of stakeholders and social partners in the legislative process. The payment from the Recovery and Resilience Mechanism is based on achieving set objectives, meaning the Commission pays out sumsto

Bias read (Center): The article presents information about Hungary's approval of a new national recovery and resilience plan and its implications for accessing EU funds. While the content involves politically sensitive issues related to the rule of law and EU funding conditions, the tone remains neutral, presenting the

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