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Hungarian President’s Transylvanian High-Altitude Selfie Annoys Romania

President provokes a spat with Romania after having a selfie taken of herself on a mountain peak in Transylvania beside a stone painted in Hungarian colours.


Hungarian President Katalin Novak attends a joint press conference with Polish President Duda in Warsaw, Poland, May 17, 2022. Photo: EPA-EFE/LESZEK SZYMANSKI.

Hungarian President Katalin Novak ruffled diplomatic feathers in Romania on Sunday when she posted a picture of herself climbing a mountain peak in Alba County in the centre of Romania standing by a stone painted in Hungarian colours.

Novak told the Romanian Foreign Minister, Bogdan Aurescu, who had criticised a previous statement by her, that her duty was to represent “all Hungarians, regardless of whether they live inside or outside the borders”.

The Romanian ministry told BIRN that it had no new comments to make regarding this issue.

“We will never cut the umbilical cord between the motherland and the Hungarians who came to live outside the borders of Hungary, nor will we ever allow it to be cut,” Novak told Hungarian media outlet Hirado.

The milestone on Piatra Secuiului has been the subject of disputes between Romanians and Hungarians for years. The stone has periodically been painted either in the colours of the Romanian flag or those of the Hungarian one.

Novak is close to Hungarian Prime Minister, Viktor Orban, and served as Minister for Family Affairs in the previous government.

Romania has said that, under international law, “a state cannot claim its rights of any kind concerning the citizens of another state”.

“The primary responsibility for respecting identity rights (ethnic, cultural, religious, linguistic) of Romanian citizens of Hungarian ethnicity rests with Romania”, the foreign ministry said.

Romania has also said that such statements like Novak’s do not correspond to European standards, or to the spirit of the treaty of understanding, cooperation and good neighbourliness between Romania and Hungary.

Novak was on a private visit to Romania to Cluj-Napoca and Alba-Iulia in Transylvania for a cultural event. On Saturday, she took part in the unveiling of the statue of the Hungarian-Transylvanian Prince Gabor Bethlen in the centre of Alba Iulia.

At this event, a Romanian Social Democratic Party senator, Calin Maties, gave Novak a bouquet with a Romanian flag coloured ribbon, reminding her that Transilvania was and will always belong to Romanians.

“I respect all Hungarians, just as I respect all people, regardless of ethnicity, race or nationality,” he said.

Transylvania formed part of the Kingdom of Hungary before Austria-Hungary’s defeat in World War I saw it ceded to Romania. It remains home to a significant Hungarian community, as do Slovakia, Serbia and Ukraine.

Madalin Necsutu